How To Get What You Want
Orison Swett Marden
Something Touched Him
The most valuable thing which ever comes into a life
is that experience, that book, that sermon, that person, that incident,
that emergency, that accident, that catastrophe—that
something which touches the springs of a person’s inner nature and
flings
open the doors of their great within, revealing its
hidden resources.
A cub lion, as the fable runs, was
one day playing alone in the forest while his mother slept. As the
different objects attracted
his attention, the cub thought he would explore a bit
and see what the great world beyond his home was like. Before he
realized
it, he had wandered so far that he could not find his
way back. He was lost.
Very much frightened, the cub ran
frantically in every direction calling piteously for his mother, but no
mother responded.
Weary with his wanderings, he did not know what to do,
when a sheep, whose offspring had been taken from her, hearing his
pitiful cries, made friends with the lost cub, and
adopted him.
The sheep became very fond of her
foundling, which in a short while grew so much larger than herself that
at times she was
almost afraid of it. Often, too, she would detect a
strange, far-off look in its eyes which she could not understand.
The foster mother and her adopted
lived very happily together, until one day a magnificent lion appeared,
sharply outlined
against the sky, on the top of an opposite hill. He
shook his tawny mane and uttered a terrific roar, which echoed through
the hills. The sheep mother stood trembling, paralyzed
with fear. But the moment this strange sound reached his ears, the
lion cub listened as though spellbound, and a strange
feeling which he had never before experienced surged through his being
until he was all a-quiver.
The lion’s roar had touched a chord
in his nature that had never before been touched. It aroused a new force
within him which
he had never felt before. New desires, a strange new
consciousness of power possessed him. A new nature stirred in him, and
instinctively, without a thought of what he was doing,
he answered the lion’s call with a corresponding roar.
Trembling with mingled fear, surprise and bewilderment at the new powers aroused within him, the awakened animal gave his
foster mother a pathetic glance, and then, with a tremendous leap, started toward the lion on the hill.
The lost lion had found himself. Up
to this he had gamboled around his sheep mother just as though he were a
lamb developing
into a sheep, never dreaming he could do anything that
his companions could not do, or that he had any more strength than
the ordinary sheep. He never imagined that there was
within him a power which would strike terror to the beasts of the
jungle.
He simply thought he was a sheep, and would run at the
sight of a dog and tremble at the howl of a wolf. Now he was amazed
to see the dogs, the wolves, and other animals which
formerly had so terrified him flee from him.
As long as this lion thought he was a
sheep, he was as timid and retiring as a sheep; he had only a sheep’s
strength and a
sheep’s courage, and by no possibility could he have
exerted the strength of a lion. If such a thing had been suggested to
him he would have said, “How could I exert the
strength of a lion? I am only a sheep, and just like other sheep. I
cannot
do what they cannot do.” But when the lion was aroused
in him, instantly he became a new creature, king of the forest, with
no rivals save the tiger and the panther. This
discovery doubled, trebled and quadrupled his conscious power, a power
which
it would not have been possible for him to exert a
minute before he had heard the lion’s roar.
But for the roar of the lion on the
distant hill, which had aroused the sleeping lion within him, he would
have continued
living the life of a sheep and perhaps would never
have known that there was a lion in him. The roar of the lion had not
added
anything to his strength, had not put new power into
him; it had merely aroused in him what was already there, simply
revealed
to him the power he already possessed. Never again,
after such a startling discovery, could this young animal be satisfied
to live a sheep’s life. A lion’s life, a lion’s
liberty, a lion’s power, the jungle thereafter for him.
There is in every normal human being a
sleeping lion. It is just a question of arousing it, just a question of
something happening
that will awaken us, stir the depths of our being, and
arouse the sleeping power within us.
Just as the young lion, after it had
once discovered that it was a lion would never again be satisfied to
live the life of
a sheep, when we discover that we are more than mere
clay, when we at last become conscious that we are more than human, that
we are gods in the making, we shall never again be
satisfied to live the life of common clods of earth. We shall feel a new
sense of power welling up within us, a power which we
never before dreamed we possessed, and never be quite the same again,
never again be content with low-flying ideals, with a
cheap success. Ever after we will aspire. We will look up; struggle
up and on to higher and ever higher planes.
Phillips Brooks used to say that
after a man has once discovered that he has been living but a half life
the other half will
haunt him until he releases it, and he never again
will be content to live a half life. When one becomes conscious that the
reality of them, that the truth of their being is God,
that they are indissolubly connected with omnipotent power, they feel
the thrill of divine force surging through every atom
of their being, and can never doubt their divinity or possibilities
again. They can never again be timid, weak, hesitating
or fearful. They rest serenely conscious that they are in close touch,
in vital union, with the Infinite. They feel
omnipotent power pulsating through their very being, they feel the
omnipotent
arm sustaining, upholding them, and they know that
their mission on earth is divinely planned and divinely protected.
Many a poor child has grown up in the
slums believing that they were like all the other children in their
neighborhood, that
there was no special future for them, nothing
distinctive, nothing out of the dead level of their monotonous
environment;
but something unexpectedly happens, some emergency,
some catastrophe, something which makes a tremendous call upon the great
within of themselves, and they are suddenly surprised
to discover that they are different altogether from those about them.
Something has touched them, something in them have
been aroused, something which shows them that they have a tremendous
latent
power which they did not before know they possessed,
and they unhesitatingly answer the call. They go out into the great
world,
and are never again satisfied with a cheap success,
never again satisfied with their old nature or content with their old
environment.
There are men and women who have won
distinction in every field who would not believe that there was such a
possibility for
them until they had actually proved it. Twenty-five
years ago, for instance, you could not have persuaded Charles M. Schwab
that he was the man later years have proved him to be.
If twenty-five years ago anyone had given a picture of himself as he
is today, had declared that he would be such a man, he
would have ridiculed the idea. He would have said, “Such a thing is
absurd, I am not such a man. This is the picture of a
giant. I am no giant, nor genius. I am just an ordinary, hard-working
man.” But Mr. Schwab has not even yet fully found
himself. He has not discovered all the man that it is possible to
develop,
or anything like it. He has only brought out part of
the giant in him. Emergency may some time call out the rest, the bigger
giant.
There are plenty of young men and
young women in our great industrial institutions today who could not be
made to believe
that perhaps in a single year they will be filling
positions of great responsibility and power, and yet the possibility is
there. The future great general, the successful
executive, is slumbering in the soldier in the ranks, in the clerk
today.
Many a future superintendent, many a manager is today
filling the humble position of office boy, errand boy, or waiter in
a restaurant or hotel.
Every discovery of new powers, new
assets in yourself, stimulates you tremendously to new efforts, to new
endeavor. We have
all seen instances where an ordinary clerk, with
seemingly ordinary ability, has suddenly been promoted, and the
stimulus,
the tonic of advancement, the new hope of further
success that has prodded them, has often added twenty-five or fifty per
cent to their ability by uncovering new resources, new
and before undreamed of powers.
They were not conscious of what was
in them until the opportunity came, until the motive uncovered, unlocked
and liberated
their before undreamed of resources. In the last world
war thousands of young men who did not think they had much courage,
perhaps even believed they would be cowards in battle,
were whirled into the armies by the excitement, the hypnotism, the
daring of their associates, and found that the bigger
man in them responded to the call, and that when it came they did not
hesitate bravely to face the enemy’s shells, the
enemy’s guns. Many youths have joined the army who were not thought much
of at home, who were called stupid and dull and
ne’er-do-wells, blockheads, by their parents and teachers, but when they
got
into the army they found themselves, found they had
courage, grit, determination, daring, stick-toit-iveness.
The experience of a multitude of men
who have realized an infinitely bigger man in themselves than they ever
imagined was
there, ought to teach us that in every human being, no
matter how successful they may be, there are still enormous
undiscovered
possibilities.
It is the person you are capable of
making, not the one you have become, that is most important to you. You
cannot afford
to carry this enormous asset to your grave unused. As a
business man or woman you would not think of having a lot of idle
capital in the bank, drawing no interest, uninvested,
unused. Do you realize that this is exactly what you are doing with
yourself? You have assets within you infinitely more
valuable than money capital. Why do you not use your capital? This is
what you would ask a businessman who was pinching
along, worried all the time because he thought he could not meet his
obligations,
pay his notes, when he had a large amount of idle
capital in the bank. You would declare the man was foolish. You are more
foolish because you have immortal capital lying idle.
Why don’t you use it? Why do you hitch along in this little one-horse
way all your life on a little capital when you have so
much unused capital, so much reserve assets? Why not use them?
Try to bring out that possible man or
woman. You know that you never have done it to anything like its
possibility as yet.
Now, why not plan to bring out this enormous residue,
these great unused resources, this locked-up ability which has never
come out of you? You know it is there. You
instinctively feel it. Your intuition, your instinct, your ambition tell
you that
there is a much bigger person in you than you have
ever found or used. Why don’t you use them, why don’t you get at them,
why don’t you call them out, why don’t you stir them
up? Why don’t you get the spark to this giant powder within you and
explode
it?
The finding of the larger
possibilities of man, the unused part, and the undiscovered part is the
function of the New Philosophy.
It may be covered under all sorts of debris—doubt,
lack of self-confidence, timidity, fear, worry, uncertainty, anxiety,
hatred,
jealousy, revenge, envy, selfishness. These may all be
neutralized by right thinking.
How often it happens that people who
have long been “down-and-out,” who have been considered “nobodies,”
“good-for-nothings,”
not well balanced, have changed suddenly, as though
touched by a magic wand, and have quickly become men or women of power,
inspirers, and helpers of others! Something happened
that quickened their spirit, and from miserable liabilities they have
suddenly been converted into valuable assets to their
community.
John B. Gough was an intemperate
nobody. All at once, apparently by accident, he was converted. Something
touched Gough and
from being a slave of the bottle he became its master.
From a miserable example he was transformed into a tremendous uplifting
and inspiring force in the community. Before he came
to himself he was dragging men down; after he responded to the call of
the divinity within, he was leading hundreds and
thousands of men to take the pledge, to lead cleaner and nobler lives.
When a poor youth working as scullion
in a kitchen in Italy first got a glimpse of a great painting, the
sight aroused something
within him which he had never before felt. It revealed
a new artistic impulse, and he exclaimed, “I, too, am a painter!”
Following
this inward call, he got a chance to work in the
studio of a famous artist, and finally became a greater artist than the
painter
of the picture which had inspired him.
How many men who had been a positive
menace to society, all at once have turned about and become inspired
leaders! Something
touched them, awakened the God within, and they turned
their faces from darkness to light, from the lower to the higher, and
accomplished grand things. It may have been an
inspiring book, a lecture, or a flash of divine illumination that gave
them
a glimpse of themselves, but whatever it was it
started them on the right road, turned them from ugliness to beauty,
from
wrong to right, from enemies of society to great
benefactors.
The transformation of Saul the persecutor into Paul the great apostle of the Gentiles is one of the grandest instances of
self revelation through a flash of divine illumination.
What a revolution would be effected
in the whole race if this something which touched Saul on his way to
Damascus, when “suddenly
there shined round about him a light from heaven,”
could touch all the human beings who are going wrong, the “nobodies,”
the
“down-and-outs,” the discouraged, the despondent,
those who have fallen by the wayside! What a leap toward the millennium
the race would take if all these dead souls could be
awakened and made anew by this mysterious something which made the
vengeful
persecutor of Christians the greatest of the teachers
of Christianity! If this divine spark, which en-kindles a new fire in
human hearts, makes men out of beasts, and good
citizens out of hoboes, drunkards and criminals, could be ignited in the
breasts
of all, despair and misery would vanish from the
earth.
When one has once discovered or
uncovered a bit of their divine pattern, when enough light is thrown
upon it to enable them
to see the divine, immortal plan foreshadowed in their
nature, they will never be content until they uncover the rest of the
pattern; and no one can do this by living a coarse,
low, sensual life. Such a life puts a film on the ideals, and dims the
spiritual vision.
The world has a right to expect those
who have even partly discovered themselves, who have become conscious
of their divine
origin, to hold up their heads, to do their work a
little better, to be a little more dead-in-earnest, to live on a higher
plane, to set a little better example in general than
those who have not yet tasted of their hidden power. The world needs
great inspirers more than it needs great lawyers,
physicians, clergymen or statesmen. It needs the Lincolns more than it
needs
railroad magnates, steel magnates, great financiers or
great merchants.
When the consciousness of his
heredity touched the lion cub, when his inheritance of strength, of
terrific power, was revealed
to him, he turned his back forever on the old life.
Never again could he return to the sheepfold, never again could he be
satisfied with his sheep nature, with the half life he
had been living. From the moment he realized he was a lion, there was
no more sheepfold for him. Freedom, the great open
world, the jungle, the forest for him, for he felt his kingship, his
power
over all the things that had so terrified him in the
past.
When an individual has once proved
beyond question that they have great latent power, vast possibilities
which had never before
been called out, it would be impossible that they
should ever again be satisfied with the half life they had been living.
Their whole newly discovered nature would revolt
against a return to the lower plane on which their weaker, lesser self
had
lived.
You perhaps were reared under
conditions which have kept you ignorant of your own possibilities until
something has happened
to throw a new light upon your real nature. Then you
discovered that you were not the tame, timid sheep that you had always
thought you were, until that something happened which
has revealed the lion in you.
Perhaps you have been wandering all
your past life, living in the shepherd’s folds in the churches, perhaps
never dreaming
that you were not a sheep, that you did not belong to
that particular shepherd’s fold. Yet you may have had an instinctive
feeling that there was something in you which did not
respond to the sheep call, that there was a something within you which
did not fit your environment, which did not belong to
the conditions in which you found yourself. You may have been conscious
that there was something in you which never responded
to the call which appealed to those about you.
You may have heard the voice that answered your yearning while reading an inspiring book, or while listening to a new philosophy
conversation which seemed to open up a new compartment in your nature.
No matter where you hear this call, when you do hear it something within you will answer the call and you will know that you
have been touched to a higher, a finer purpose.
The new philosophy, however,
especially appeals to the undiscovered part of us, to those hidden,
latent forces within us,
which we have not hitherto been able to get hold of.
In other words, it appeals to our hitherto unused assets, our plus or
surplus life capital. You will find something in
people who have embraced it, in people who understand it, which you do
not
find in others.
The new philosophy acts like a leaven
in the nature, giving new life, new force, new meaning to the
individual. In short,
it discovers a new human being in the old one. It
neutralizes, destroys, that which would degrade them, those things which
were working against their welfare, and it develops
new forces, unlocks new resources which enlarge the individual.
During the past hundred years not a
single new quality or new principle has been added to the laws of
chemistry, not an iota
of change has been made in the laws of physics, and
yet what miracles of discovery, of invention, the great scientists and
inventors have called out of these very same qualities
and laws during the last hundred years!
Sir Isaac Newton had the same identical material, the same identical laws of chemistry, physics which Edison is using today,
but Edison has called out hundreds of inventions to Newton’s one discovery.
Human nature, like natural law, is
the same today as it was centuries ago, but what a marvelous development
of man’s power
we are witnessing today! How amazing has been the
advancement of human ability! What marvelous strides in intelligence, in
efficiency, and in the development of his natural
resources man has made!
We marvel at all this, but the new
philosophy is disclosing to man a new and more potent law back of the
flesh but not of
it, an intelligence back of the crystal, back of the
atom, back of the electron which directs, molds, fashions, conditions
the future of every particle of matter in the
universe. Previously this was ascribed to an unknown law. A hundred
years ago
people did not know that when a crystal was dissolved
it would always assume the exact form of the same kind of crystal when
its particles were free to re-arrange themselves. We
did not then know that the ambition which appears in man is really an
aggregate of the ambition in the separate electrons.
We did not then know that a man’s history was largely determined in the
electrons themselves. But science is now beginning to
recognize that the great cosmic intelligence is back of everything in
the universe, of every expression of nature, of every
step in man’s upward journey through the ages.
The new philosophy especially appeals
to that unknown part of us which is still waiting to be discovered,
that part which
is still locked up tight in the great within of us. It
plays the part of a Columbus, and discovers vast territory within us
of which we had been unconscious.
An honest dissatisfaction with our
achievement means we have more resources inside, and that until we find
at least a measure
of satisfaction there is still more to discover. We
have an instinctive feeling, that there is something sublimely beautiful
in life we have never yet found, because we have never
yet been satisfied. We have an intuition that this something will
satisfy
our inmost yearnings, that it will quench the soul’s
thirst, satisfy the soul’s hunger.
The orthodox churches undertook to
find this satisfying something, and while they have done much, yet many
church members
feel that there is still a tremendous, unfilled vacuum
in their hearts, unsatisfied longings and yearnings in their souls.
After centuries of hunting for the divine balm of
Gilead, the elixir which would heal the soul’s hurts, the great majority
of churches are being less and less frequented.
Pastors are finding it more and more difficult to induce people to
attend
their church services, because they are not fed; they
do not get that satisfaction which they instinctively feel belongs to
the children of the King of Kings.
On every hand we find people who have
been groping all their lives in vain, trying to find something which
would answer the
inner call for a larger life, something which would
satisfy their longings, feed their soul hunger, and help them to find
fulfillment of their life dreams.
If you are groping to find that
something which will give enduring satisfaction, which will satisfy your
soul; if you have
not yet found that something which answers the
persistent inward call of your being; if you have not yet found that
living
water which quenches the soul’s thirst, come and drink
at the fountain of the new philosophy.
Man has glimpsed only a little bit of
the divine plan, but this glimpse promises so much that he feels he
must see the whole.
The part of ourselves we have discovered reveals only a
part of the divine pattern, and we shall never rest until we trace
the whole.
The larger, grander, superb thing we
know and instinctively feel we ought to be beats so mightily so
persistently beneath
the little dwarfed thing we are that we must uncover
it, we must develop it, and we must use it. No human being can be
satisfied
while they are haunted by that other part of the
divine pattern, the part which was shown to them in the mount of their
highest
moment. The part of ourselves we have discovered is a
prophecy of an infinitely larger and more magnificent whole, and we
must find it. This is the great object of our
existence. We are here to find the rest of the pattern of the divine
man.
Individually we have gotten a glimpse
of the larger possible man, and we must bring them out. We have been
shown a part which
prophesies the possible whole, and every now and then
lest we become discouraged and give up the pursuit, nature gives us
a Lincoln, a Gladstone, a Phillips Brooks, in order
apparently to show us the possibilities of man and to stimulate us in
our efforts to evolve the God man.
The new life philosophy is the Christ
motive which has been working in man all up through the ages in its
efforts to produce
the master man, not the selfish, grasping, greedy man,
but the masterful, selfless, impersonal man, the Christ like man or
woman with the God consciousness, the man or woman who
realizes that they are part of all mankind; that they have come out
from God and that they are going back to God.
How To Get What You Want
You are victory organized; you were born to conquer, to play a magnificent part in life’s great game. But you can never do
anything great or grand until you have such a conviction of yourself and your ability.
We establish relations with our
desires, with whatever is dominant in our minds, with the things we long
for with all our
hearts, and we tend to realize these things in
proportion to the persistency and intensity of our longings and our
intelligent
efforts to realize them.
Stop thinking trouble if you want to attract its opposite; stop thinking poverty if you wish to attract plenty. Refuse to
have anything to do with the things you fear, the things you do not want.
A piece of magnetized steel will
attract only the products of iron ore. It has no affinity for wood,
copper, rubber, or any
other substance that has not iron in it. When you were
a boy you found that your little steel magnet would pick up a needle
but not a match or a toothpick. It would draw to
itself only that like itself.
Men and women are human magnets. Just
as a steel magnet drawn through a pile of rubbish will pull out only
the things which
have an affinity for it, so we are constantly drawing
to us, establishing relations with, the things and the people that
respond
to our thoughts and ideals. Our environment, our
associates, our general condition are the result of our mental
attraction.
These things have come to us on the physical plane
because we have concentrated upon them, have related ourselves to them
mentally; they are our affinities, and will remain
with us as long as the affinity for them continues to exist in our
minds.
Your thoughts, your viewpoints, your
conception of what your status and position in life will be, your ideal
of your future,
will draw you exactly to that plane like a lodestone.
Focus your mind, your predictions, your expectations on poverty, failure
and wretchedness; banish ambition, hope, expectation
of good things, and give full sway in your mentality to fear, worry,
doubt, anticipation of evil, and the ego magnet will
draw you unerringly to squalid surroundings, to an inferior position,
to association with persons of a lower order of mind
on a meaner social plane.
The great trouble with all of us who
are struggling with unhappy or unfortunate conditions is, that we have
separated ourselves
in some way from the great magnetic center of
creation. We are not thinking right, and so we are not attracting the
right
things. “Think the things you want.” The profoundest
philosophy is locked up in these few words. Think of them clearly,
persistently,
concentrating upon them with all the force and might
of your mind, and struggle toward them with all your energy. This is
the way to make yourself a magnet for the things you
want. But the moment you begin to doubt, to worry, to fear, you
demagnetize
yourself, and the things you desire flee from you. You
drive them away by your mental attitude. They cannot come near you
while you are deliberately separating yourself from
them. You are going in one direction, and the things you want are going
in the opposite direction.
“A desire in the heart for anything,” says H. Emilie Cady, “is God’s sure promise sent beforehand to indicate that it is yours
already in the limitless realm of supply.”
No matter how discouraging your
present outlook, how apparently unpromising your future, cling to your
desire and you will
realize it. Picture the ideal conditions, visualize
the success, which you long to attain; imagine yourself already in the
position you are ambitious to reach. Do not
acknowledge limitations, do not allow any other suggestion to lodge in
your mind
than the success you long for, the conditions you
aspire to. Picture your desires as actually realized, and hold fast to
your
vision with all the tenacity you can muster. This is
the way out of your difficulties; this is the way to open the door ahead
of you to the place higher up, to better and brighter
conditions.
When Clifton Crawford, the actor,
started on his career in America, he played in one-week performances in
small towns and
cities. One night he was told by a prominent member of
the company that his work wasn’t much good, that he would never be
successful, and had better go back home to Scotland.
Notwithstanding this discouraging but well-meant criticism and advice,
young Crawford remained in America, continued in his
profession and in a comparatively short time reached the coveted
position
of a Broadway “star.” After his first success in New
York he had the satisfaction of meeting the friend who had advised him
to return to his own country, and reminded him of the
incident.
Clifton Crawford won out because he related himself mentally to the thing he wanted, because he listened to the voice in his
own soul rather than to the pessimistic predictions of outside voices.
Why has the heart restless yearnings For heights and steps untrod? Some call it the voice of longing And others the voice
of God.
That something within you which longs
to be brought out, to be expressed, is the voice of God calling to you.
Don’t disregard
it. Don’t be afraid of your longings; there is
divinity in them. Don’t try to strangle them because you think they are
much
too extravagant, too Utopian. The Creator has not
given you a longing to do that which you have no ability to do.
One reason why the lives of many of
us are so narrow and pinched, small and common-place, is because we are
afraid to fling
out our desires, our longings, afraid to visualize
them. We become so accustomed to putting our confidence only in things
that we see on the physical plane, in the material
that is real to the senses, that it is very difficult for us to realize
that the capital power, the force that does things,
resides in the mind. Instead of believing in our possession of the
things
we desire, we believe in our limitations, in our
restrictions. We demagnetize ourselves by wrong thinking and lack of
faith.
We see only the obstacles in our path, and forget that
man, working with God, is greater than any obstacle that can oppose
itself to his will.
Benjamin Disraeli knew this when he
said, “Man is not the creature of circumstances. Circumstances are the
creatures of man.”
He demonstrated its truth in his own life. Alien in
race and creed, with other circumstances apparently dead against him at
the start, the resolute young Jew overcame all
obstacles, and reached the goal of his ideal. He became Prime Minister
of England,
and was made Earl of Beaconsfield by his sovereign,
Queen Victoria. Lowell did not utter a mere airy, poetic idea when he
said, The thing we long for, that we are For one
transcendent moment.
He spoke a simple truth. The poet is
always the prophet. He goes ahead of the scientist, and points the way
that leads upward
to the ideal. Like faith, the poet knows and sees far
in advance of the senses. He knows that the vision of our exalted
moments
is the model given us to make real on the material
plane.
The men who have climbed up in the
world have seen themselves climbing, have pictured themselves actually
in the position
they longed to be in. They have climbed up mentally
first. They have kept a vision of themselves as ever climbing to higher
and higher things. They have continually affirmed
their ability to climb, to grow up to their ideal. If we ever hope to
make
our dreams come true, we must do as they did; we must
actually live in the conscious realization of our ideal. This is the
entering wedge which will split the difficulties ahead
of us, which will open the doors which shut us from our own.
If you are discouraged by repeated
failures and disappointments, suffering the pangs of thwarted ambition;
if you are not
doing the thing you long to do; if life is not
yielding the satisfaction, the success and joy of happy service; if your
plans
do not prosper; if you are hampered by poverty and a
narrow, crude, uncongenial environment, there is something wrong—not
with the world, or the Creator’s beneficent plans for
His children, but with yourself. You are not thinking right. You are
not visualizing yourself as you long to be.
We are, every one of us, both
ourselves and our environment, true pictures of what we have thought,
believed, and done in
the past. Every moment of our lives we are
experiencing the result of thought. The outward things that have been
acting on
us, shaping the conditions in which we live, are
chiefly the fruits of our own motives, thoughts and acts. What we
believe,
what we think, what we expect, shapes our lives.
Through the control and direction of our thoughts, backed up with
corresponding
efforts on the physical plane, we can attract to us
all our heart’s desires.
How often do we hear it said of some
man, “Everything he undertakes succeeds,” or “Everything he touches
turns to gold?” Why?
Because the man is constantly picturing to himself the
success of his undertakings and he is backing up his vision by his
efforts. By clinging to his vision, by vigorous
resolution and persistent, determined endeavor he is continually making
himself
a powerful magnet to draw his own to him. Consciously
or unconsciously, he is using the divine intelligence or force by the
use of which every human being may mold himself and
his environment according to the pattern in his mind.
Why don’t you use your divine power
to make yourself what you long to be? Why don’t you cling to the vision
of yourself which
you see in your highest moment, and resolve to make
the vision a reality? By persistent right thinking, backed by the steady
exercise of your will, you can, if you desire, remake
yourself and your environment. Since we can “for one transcendent
moment”
be the thing we long for, you and I and every human
being can make that transcendent or highest moment permanent. It is
purely
a matter of right thinking. Every time we visualize
the thing we long for, every time we see ourselves in imagination in the
position we long to fill, we are forming a habit which
will tend to make our highest moments permanent, to bring our vision
out of the ideal into the actual.
If people only knew the possibilities
which center in the highest development of their visualizing powers it
would revolutionize
their lives. Until comparatively recent times most of
the country between Omaha and the Rocky Mountains was a vast barren
desert, and it looked as though it would always be
absolutely worthless. Many intelligent men wondered why the Creator ever
made such a dreary waste as these millions of acres
presented, and when it was suggested in Congress that the Government
assist
in building a railroad across this desert from the
Missouri River to the Pacific Slope, even men like Webster laughed at
the
idea. Webster said that such an undertaking would be a
wicked waste of public money, and he suggested the importation of
camels
for the purpose of carrying the United States mail
across the Western desert. He believed this was the only use that could
be made of those waste lands.
But the vision seen by the men who
conceived the Union Pacific Railroad was no idle dream; it was a
foreshadowing of the reality.
Before a rail had been laid, these men saw great
thriving cities, vast populations and millions of fertile farms
springing
up like magic where the men without a vision of its
possibilities saw nothing but alkali plains, sage brush and coyotes. It
was the men who were not limited by appearances, by
what the senses told them, who transformed the desert into a thing of
beauty and untold wealth.
Human beings are like this arid
desert, packed with marvelous possibilities which are just waiting for
that which will arouse
their latent forces and make the germs of those
wonderful possibilities blossom into beauty and power. What we need is a
firm
belief in the vision of ourselves which we see in the
moment of our highest inspiration. As soon as we feel the touch of the
awakening, arousing, energizing power of an
unalterable faith in our own divinity, in our ability to be “the thing
we long
for,” our lives will blossom into beauty and grandeur.
The realization of our power to
create ideals and to make these live in reality is destined to
revolutionize the world, because
we build life through our ideals. This power to build
mentally is the pathway of achievement, the way which will lead to the
millennium. ‘We cannot accomplish anything, do
anything, create anything except through an ideal, a vision.
“The vision that you glorify in your mind,” says James Allen, “the ideal that you enthrone in your heart—this you will build
your life by, this you will become.
“The thoughtless, the ignorant, and
the indolent, seeing only the apparent effects of things and not the
things themselves,
talk of luck, of fortune and chance. Seeing a man grow
rich, they say ‘How lucky he is!’ Observing another become
intellectual,
they exclaim ‘How highly favored he is!’ And noting
the saintly character and wide influence of another, they remark, ‘How
chance aids him at every turn!’ They do not see the
trials and failures and struggles which these men have voluntarily
encountered
in order to gain their experience; have no knowledge
of the sacrifice they have made, of the undaunted efforts they have put
forth, of the faith they have exercised, that they
might overcome the apparently insurmountable, and realize the vision of
their heart.”
The reason why so many people fail to
realize their ideals is that they are not willing to do their part to
make it real.
Remember that the longing, the desire to do a certain
thing, is merely sowing the seed of your ambition. If you stop at this
you will get about as much harvest as the farmer would
get if he put his seed in the ground without preparing the soil,
without
fertilizing it and keeping the weeds down.
You must back up that which your
heart longs to realize with an honest purpose to do your best, a
dead-in-earnest effort to
make your vision real. The mere holding of the desire
to do so, no matter how persistently or strongly you hold it, will not
help you to realize your dreams. You must not only sow
the seed of desire and longing, but you must do all the nourishing,
cultivating, caring for, or you will only reap a
thistle harvest. We see men and women everywhere reaping a very thistly,
a very weedy harvest from the sowing of mere longings.
These people can scarcely get enough out of their harvest to keep them
alive, simply because they took no care of their seed
after the planting.
The constant nursing, cultivating the desire, the ambition, keeping our heart’s longings and soul yearnings alive, wholesome
and healthy by active endeavor, is the only way in which we can match our dreams with their realities.
Watch an immigrant boy who lands in
America practically with nothing but the clothes he wears, without
knowing our language
or customs, and with no friends, no “pull” to advance
him, and see how quickly he outdistances many American youths who were
born and brought up in the very lap of opportunities.
Why? Because this boy constantly thinks and dreams of making his way
in the world. He sees himself a successful man, and is
forever planning and pushing toward his object.
He begins, perhaps, by selling
newspapers in the streets. Then his ambition grows and he dreams of some
day having a newsstand.
He attends night school in order to get an education.
He toils and economizes, flings his enthusiasm and his whole being into
his work, is constantly enlarging his mind and also
making himself a magnet to attract the thing he longs for. He is obeying
the law of attraction, of opulence, and in a little
while we see him with a news stand of his own. But he does not stop
here.
He keeps dreaming, planning, working for something a
little larger, and soon he adds books and stationery to his stock in
trade. Before long we find him with a large stand in a
railway station or in some public place, always saving, and dreaming,
planning, thinking success. In a few years more he
owns a handsome shop and becomes a real factor in the business world.
His
whole mental life is poured into that one channel, and
of course he is perpetually increasing his magnetic power to attract
to himself money and all the other things he desires.
The ambition to become rich is not a
lofty one, but the success of this typical immigrant boy illustrates the
law of success
in every field. For the law is neither moral nor
unmoral, the nature of the object concentrated on does not affect its
action.
It may be the noble vision of a Jeanne d’Arc, of a
Savonarola, or of a Lincoln, or it may be a wholly selfish, or an
unworthy
object, the attractive, constructive forces will build
just the same toward the realization of the vision. If a man’s ambition
is to own saloons and sell liquor or to be the
proprietor of a gambling resort, and he keeps working away on the
material
as well as the mental plan, he will succeed, just as a
man who works in a similar way to become a teacher, or a missionary,
succeeds. The same concentration, the same absorption,
the same dreaming and thinking and pushing along any other line, law,
medicine, engineering, science, farming, whatever it
may be, will produce like results. The idea is that the everlasting
dreaming
and pushing, the alertness to take advantage of
opportunity, the constant visualizing of the thing one yearns for most,
inevitably
bring the desired results. These are the constructive
processes, based on the mental vision, which bring us the things we
desire.
What we think most about is constantly weaving itself into the fabric of our career, becoming a part of ourselves, increasing
the power of our mental magnet to attract those things we most ardently desire.
When the architect looks at the plan
of his building he does not see the plan merely. That only suggests the
building. It
is the invisible building, the creation of his mind he
sees. What he takes in from the plan with his eyes is not the reality
at all. He sees in all its details the building of his
mental vision. If he did not see it in this way, it would never become
a reality. If he could see only the mechanical plans
he would not be an architect at all.
The framework of your life structure
is invisible. It is on the mental plane. You are laying the foundation
for your future,
fixing its limits by the expectations you are
visualizing. You cannot do anything bigger than you plan to do. The
mental plans
always come first. Your future building will merely be
carrying out in detail what you are visualizing today. The future is
simply an extension of the present. You are right now
by your thought habit, by your prevailing mental attitude, making your
place in life. You are locating yourself, settling
what you are to be. In other words, you are right now making your
future,
deciding what your position in the world shall be. And
it will be broad, ever growing, ever expanding, or it will become
narrower,
more pinched and rutty, according to your mental plan,
according to the vision you see.
The only world you will ever know
anything about, the only world that is true for you at this moment, is
the one you create
mentally --the world you are conscious of. The
environment you fashion out of your thoughts, your beliefs, your ideals,
your
philosophy is the only one you will ever live in.
Whatever you long for you are headed
toward, and whatever thought dominates you, or motive is uppermost in
your mind, is attracting
its affinities. How quickly, for example, a youth who
goes from his country home to the city to seek his fortune gravitates
toward the things which are uppermost in his mind. He
may not know a soul in the city he enters, but in a very short time
we find him with his own people, those whose tastes,
whose desires and propensities are like his own. He has attracted his
affinities.
One boy’s mind is fixed on pleasure,
and he gravitates to the saloon, to the dance hall, to the vicious
dives, to the gambling
table. Another boy’s great desire is self-improvement,
and he gravitates to the Y. M. C. A., to some church. We find him in
the night schools, in the libraries, or attending
lectures, trying ‘to improve his education, to make as broad visioned,
as
cultured and successful a man as it is possible to
make of himself.
The same thing is true of girls. They
gravitate toward their desires, their ideals, toward the things on
which they have set
their hearts. Led by their weaknesses or their
strength, they are pulled in the direction on which their thoughts are
fixed,
whether good or bad.
If ten thousand strangers from other
cities were landed in New York today and left to their own devices, they
would very quickly
be attracted to their affinities. The gambler would
find other gamblers, the musician would gravitate to other musicians,
the artist would be drawn to art circles; the pure
minded, those of high ideals, would soon find others on the same plane,
while the impure minded, those with vulgar, low flying
ideals, would as quickly find companions like themselves.
A mental magnet cannot attract
opposite qualities. It can only attract things like itself, and it is
our privilege to give
the magnet its quality. We can inject hate into it,
jealousy, envy, revenge; we can in a very short time demagnetize the
magnet
which was pulling good things so that it will attract
bad things. It is for us to decide the quality of the magnetic current
that shall flow out from us, but the mind is always a
magnet sending out and attracting something, and this something which
flows back to us always corresponds to the mental
outflow.
If we charge it with love, sincerity,
genuineness, helpfulness, great spiritual hunger for the good, the
beautiful and the
true, a longing for a larger and a fuller life, we
shall make the mind a powerful magnet to attract the affinities of these
qualities. But in an inconceivably short time we can
so completely change our mental magnet with thoughts of hatred, spite
and bitterness that it will drive away all the good
and attract the opposite, strengthening the hatred and bitterness in our
souls.
In short, whatever is in the mind at
the moment is the thing you are inviting to come and live with you. Your
suspicion attracts
suspicion. Jealousy brings more jealousy, hate more
hate, just as love brings love to meet it, as friendliness brings more
friendliness, as sympathy and good will toward all
draw the same to you from others and increase your popularity and
magnetic
power.
We build as we think. Our lives
follow our thoughts. As we think so we are. Your personality and your
world are limited by
the extension of your own thought. You cannot project
yourself beyond these self-limitations. Many people limit themselves
to such an extent by their gloomy doubts and fears
that they utterly dwarf their divine powers and possibilities. They do
not believe that their own is coming to them. They are
always complaining, visualizing their poverty-stricken conditions,
their lack of friends, their lack of sympathy, their
lack of love, of opportunity, of social life, of everything desirable.
They do not realize that they are their own jailers,
that they are holding themselves in the very conditions they despise.
They have not learned how to make themselves magnets
for the things they desire. They do not know that our own is seeking
us and will come to us, whether it is property,
friends, love, happiness, or any other legitimate desire, unless we
drive
it away by our antagonistic thought.
If you did not believe you had the
power to walk you couldn’t walk, because you wouldn’t try to. If you
don’t believe in your
power to get what you want you won’t get it. Until you
encourage your longings and believe in your power to realize them they
will never be satisfied. You cannot rise out of your
present condition until you believe you can. The limit of your thought
will be the limit of your possibilities. Your limited
ideal of yourself will limit your execution. You will never get any
higher than your vision and your faith in that vision.
No one gets very far in this world,
or expresses great power, until he catches a glimpse of his higher
self—until he feels
that the divinity which is stirring within him, and
which impels him on the way of his ambition, in the line of his
aspiration,
is an indication, a prophecy of his ability to reach
the ideal which haunts him. The Creator has not put desires in our
hearts
without giving us the ability and the opportunity for
realizing them. There are a thousand proofs in the very formation of
our body and brain that we were planned and adapted in
every detail of our marvelous structure to achieve grand, glorious
things, that we were created and fitted for success
and happiness.
No matter how unfortunate your
environment, or how unpromising your present condition, if you cling to
your vision and keep
struggling toward its realization, you are mentally
building, enlarging your ideal, increasing the power of your mental
magnet
to attract your own.
Never mind opposition, never mind
criticism, never mind if others call you a fool or a crank—they called
the Christ the same—be
true to the mysterious message within, the divine
voice which bids you up and on. No matter what other things you have to
give up, no matter what sacrifices you have to make,
let everything else go if necessary, but cling to the ideal which haunts
your dreams, for it points to the star of your
destiny, and if you follow it you will come out of the darkness into
beauty
and brightness. Your highest ideal, the vision of your
life work which you long to make real, is your best friend. Keep as
close to it as you can, stick to it, and it will lead
you to your goal. You may not understand why the star has been put so
high above you and why so many mountains of obstacles
and difficulties intervene, but if you keep your eye on the star and
listen to the voice of your soul which bids you climb
on, you will reach it.
Many a man has never been able to
explain his success, or how he was able to wring it out of such a black
background, such
iron conditions and seemingly impossible surroundings,
as those in which he found himself at the start. But he kept pegging
away, never losing sight of his ideal, which became
his guiding star, his success angel, which ultimately led him through
the dark valleys of difficulty and opposition, up out
of the miasma of the stagnant swamps of discouragement to the heights,
where the atmosphere is pure, the outlook clear, where
excellence dwells. It led him out of the darkness into the light, into
freedom, into success.
Just because you are struggling on a
farm or in a factory, doing something against which your whole nature
rebels, because
there is no one to help you support your aged parents
or an invalid brother or sister, do not conclude that your vision must
perish. Keep pushing on as best you can, and affirming
your divine power to attain your desire. Hundreds and thousands of
poor boys and girls with poorer opportunities than
yours have done immortal deeds because they had faith in their ideal and
in their power to attain it.
It is by the perpetual focusing of
his thought upon the solving of scientific problems, added to his faith
in his ability
to solve these problems, that Edison has attracted to
himself the forces which have made him the greatest living inventor.
His mind has always run ahead of him, visualizing the
invention he was trying to bring out into objective reality. He was
always picturing himself a little higher up, a little
further on, and his success has followed his vision and his faith.
Suppose Edison had lost faith in his
vision; suppose he had allowed obstacles to discourage him and had said
to himself, “Thousands
of men have been thinking along these lines, trying to
solve these problems for a long time, and have failed, and how can
I expect to succeed? Why should I waste my time and
energies in trying to do what they found impossible?”—do you think he
would have become the power he is? Of course, he would
not,—he couldn’t, any more than Marshal Field could have become a great
merchant if he had listened to those who tried to
discourage him. Doors always open, opportunities always come, to the man
or woman who trusts and works, but nothing comes to
the weak, doubting heart, the faint endeavor, nothing comes to those who
do not believe in their divinity, their power to
overcome.
No matter how black and forbidding
the way, just imagine that you are carrying a lantern which always
advances with you and
gives you light enough for the next step, and although
it looks very dark and discouraging a little distance ahead, when you
arrive there the light will arrive also. All the light
you need is for the next step, to know that you are going in the right
direction. In other words, you must have faith, trust.
The divine plan that has created us, given us a part in the plan of
the great universe, will bring things out better than
we could if we will only do our part.
Look back upon your past lives, you
self-made men and women, and see how miraculously the doors have opened
out of the blackness
ahead of you, so that you were able to enter into the
Eden of your dream, to accomplish the thing you so long dreamed of!
Goodyear was a dreamer and a seer of
visions long before he was able to vulcanize rubber. Morse was a
“visionary” or we might
not have had the telegraph. Cyrus W. Field had a
wonderful vision of an ocean cable, and had he not gone on dreaming of
his
cable in spite of his disappointments the nations of
the world might still be dependent on ships to transmit their messages
from one to the other. Had Eli Whitney not been a seer
of visions the colored people of the South might still be picking the
seeds from cotton by hand. But for the dreams of
Marconi’s youth, wireless telegraphy might have been postponed for a
century.
Had it not been for the dreams and longings of
Alexander Graham Bell we might not even yet be talking over the wire.
Had Elias
Howe not dreamed of a sewing machine women might still
be slaves of the needle. Had it not been for Phillips’ and Garrison’s
and Lincoln’s dream of freedom, millions of our
countrymen might still be in slavery.
All of these people—every inventor,
every discoverer, every uplifter of the race, all those who have lifted
civilization up
from the Hottentots to the Lincolns and the
Gladstones, have clung to their vision in spite of incredible sufferings
and obstacles.
Nothing could turn them from their purpose or shake
their faith in their power to make their vision a reality. This was why
they won out.
Men succeed in proportion to the fixity of their vision and the invincibility of their purpose. If you can find out a man’s
quitting point, the place where he gives up, turns back, you can measure him pretty easily.
The man who conquers is the one who
moves, steadily, persistently, everlastingly towards his goal, unmindful
whether the goal
is always in sight or not, unmindful of obstacles, of
difficulties, of discouraging conditions. He moves ever forward, just
as Columbus did when he wrote day after day in his log
boat, undaunted even when his sailors mutinied, threatening to put
him in chains and to throw him overboard: “This day we
sailed west because it was our course.” This was his daily record,
because there was nothing else for him to do but to
sail west. A man with such a mighty purpose as Columbus’s wouldn’t have
turned about if his crew threatened murder every day,
because he was invincible. Nothing but death could have stopped his
onward course.
What could have stopped Farragut from
going into Mobile Bay past the enemy’s torpedoes? What could have
stayed a man with
such a mighty purpose, such invincible determination
that he lashed himself to the mast, lest if he was shot or wounded he
might fall overboard or be captured in his perilous
run past the torpedoes!
Washington showed his invincibility
of purpose and fixity of vision at Valley Forge as few men have ever
shown it. In fact,
this grim courage in face of difficulties, this fixity
of vision and inflexibility of purpose have been characteristic of
all the great men of history, to whom the world has
built monuments.
Science tells us the eagle’s wings
developed in response to the eagle’s desire to fly, to soar into the
ether. Your longings,
your yearnings for something higher and grander, your
aspirations, backed by an invincible purpose, will call out your wings,
will develop your latent power, so that you will rise
above your mediocre environment to the full measure of your
possibilities.
If all our youth were taught to keep
the soul vision inviolable, never to tamper with that sacred something
within which always
points heavenward if left alone, that something which,
no matter how poor or iron our environment, bids us look up and not
down, aspire and not grovel, civilization would
advance with marvelous strides towards the millennium.
The limit of your faith in your vision and in yourself is the limit of your achievement. Faith is the greatest magnetic power
we know of for the attraction of the things that belong to us.
A great faith, a sublime
self-confidence was the magnet which attracted to John Wanamaker that
which made him a merchant prince.
When young Wanamaker was delivering his first order of
clothing in a pushcart in the streets of Philadelphia, he did not keep
his mind fastened on his poverty and limitations, and
fear he would never get past them. On the contrary, he thought of a
great future, and when he went past the big rich
stores he pictured himself as a great merchant, and felt confident that
the
time would come when he would have a bigger and richer
store than any of them.
Where self-faith is weak, the will is
weak. Most people do not exert their will in overcoming the obstacles
in their way,
because their resolutions are weak, wishy washy. They
are not possessed by their vision, and so they cannot bring to their
aid the vigorous determination, the resolute will, the
compelling affirmation, that wins out in spite of all opposition. They
are not backed by the intense desire to realize their
vision that forces one to work and to sacrifice for it.
Desire is at the bottom of every achievement. It has ever been the great molding, shaping force in civilization. Desire is
prayer. Our prayer is behind and at the bottom of all our achievements.
Desire is behind all progress.
Civilization rests upon it. Our cities are the representations of the
desires of those who
built them. Every railroad train is a bundle of
desires, of inventors’ discoveries, of mechanics’ desires. Our homes are
manifested
desires. Our libraries are made up of multitudes of
desires of the authors who wrote the books. Our schools, our colleges,
our universities are nothing but desires fulfilled,
objectified dreams of those who have built them. Every institution rests
upon desires. Our lives, our homes, our friends, are
all manifested desires.
All great achievements, great
discoveries and inventions began in longings and desires. The success of
every poor boy and
girl who have pushed to the front began in longing, in
indefinite yearnings, which they had the faith and the courage to nurse
and back up until they realized their dreams. There is
a great difference between the yearnings of the body, the workings
of bodily desires and passions, and the yearnings and
longings of the soul. The soul longings are really the God urge in us,
the expressions of the divinity within, of the cosmic
intelligence. They open the windows of the mind and give us a glimpse
of the realities that were prepared for us at the
foundation of the world. They are not empty imaginings, but the
substance
of hoped-for things, the realities of unseen things,
the precursors of the things themselves.
We are apt to think that what we do
in the world, our life work, is purely a personal choice. But there is
something inside
of us, if we are honest and earnest, that is leading
us toward our own, the thing we were made to do. The youth answers an
advertisement, “Boy Wanted,” and gets a place which
does not at all fit him, but the divine urge within haunts him until he
changes. Again and again he may be a round peg in a
square hole, but this inner urge—call it ambition, aspiration, a divine
leading, what you will—keeps at him until he find his
own, the place that fits him.
We cannot believe that Abraham
Lincoln found the White House by accident or by following a selfish
personal ambition. No,
he was led by the Spirit to the great work for which
he was born, and for which all his previous experience had been molding
him.
And this same divine urge which led
Lincoln out of the forest to the White House is active in every human
being. There is
a divine messenger detailed at every birth to follow
the individual through life. This divine messenger acts as guide, is
always pointing out the right road and cautioning
against the wrong. If we follow the divine promptings, we shall come to
our own. The poor boys who have shaped American
history never dreamed when they left the farm in the backwoods, or the
little
village in which they were born, that they were
destined to do great things. They simply followed their instinctive
leadings
without thinking much about, or really recognizing,
their divine origin.
The mysterious unrest in the great
within of us, which is ever urging us on, is an expression of the divine
principle inherent
in every atom, in every electron in the universe; it
is the God urge which is lifting everything up to a higher and ever
higher
plane. Everything in the universe is on the way to its
highest possible expression, on the way to perfection, on the way to
its God.
We are here to do our part in raising
mankind to a higher plane by giving expression to our highest ideal, by
doing the best
we are capable of doing. In St. John we read: “To this
end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should
bear witness unto the truth.” Most people do not seem
to think that they came into the world for any special purpose or that
they are under any obligation to bear witness to the
truth. They do not seem to realize that they are bound to deliver the
message entrusted to them at birth, to realize the
vision shown them in their highest moment. Many act as if they were sent
here to catch and grab everything they can get hold of
for themselves; that they are under no special obligation to anybody
but their own families. In other words, few people
realize that they came into the world with any particular purpose other
than to gratify their own desires, to reap the harvest
that others have sown without rendering anything in return.
They regard the world upon which the
open their eyes as a legitimate field, a sort of hunting ground for
their own personal
gratification, where they are welcome to whatever they
can bag without cost to themselves. They have no appreciation whatever
of the fact that billions of people who have lived in
all the past have really been preparing the world for them; that they
are the heirs of all who have gone before them, and
that they are in honor bound to do their share in contributing to the
inheritance of those who shall come after them. We of
today have inherited the results of other people’s efforts. We are
enjoying
all the inventions, all the discoveries, all the
luxuries that are the fruits of the struggles and trials, the
sufferings,
poverty and hardship of the inventors, the
discoverers, the achievers who labored to improve the conditions of
mankind. We
were sent here to carry their work a step farther by
bringing into the actual the vision of our divinest inspiration.
The way to do this is to follow our
inspiration, what our soul longs to do. You are always gravitating
toward the vision you
hold in mind. You will never make headway in any other
direction than toward your dominant thought, your dominant desire,
and your dominant motive. Visualization will sometime
be found to be one of the great secrets of character building and
achievement.
Effort follows visualization as achievement follows
effort. Jesus achieved His Christ-hood. It was not thrust upon Him. He
achieved it just as we must achieve our ideal if we
ever attain it. The Savior was not born a Christ. This was a result of
His efforts and His work to realize His vision.
Nor did Christ hold up any
inexplicable ideal for His followers when he said, “Ye too are sons of
God.” This had never been
said before. But again and again the Savior assured
His followers that the things which He had done, and even greater
things,
those who came after Him would do.
All through His teaching Christ
assured men of their divinity. When He said, “I and my father are one,”
He did not refer to
the fact of His own superiority, to the fact that He
was more divine than others. He was always trying to convince His
disciples
that they could do what He did, that they were as
divine as He was, and that the reason they did not perform what seemed
to
them miracles was their lack of faith in their
divinity.
We rise with our vision. All
elevation, all progress, is first mental. It is based on faith in a
visualized ideal. Everything
starts with a vision, and the result always
corresponds to the nature of the vision and our faithfulness to it.
Buddha became
what he did because he gravitated towards his vision.
George Washington concentrated upon a vision of liberty and a grand
democracy which would be a model for the whole world,
and he never ceased to struggle until the vision became a reality.
Andrew
Carnegie became the great iron master because he
gravitated towards his vision; because of his struggles to realize that
dominant
vision. John Wanamaker is what he is because he
concentrated upon his vision, by always reaching out toward it, always
striving
to match with reality his dream of a mammoth business.
Every man becomes like his ideal, realizes the vision which dominates his life, and towards which he constantly struggles.
Playing The Glad Game
I am not fighting my fight, I am singing my Song.
Life should be one glad sweet song instead of a dirge as it is with so many people. It was intended that life should be a
glory and not a grind.
The new philosophy teaches that everybody ought to be happier than the happiest of us are now. Our lives were intended to
be infinitely richer, grander, and more glorious than they are.
Have you ever experienced that moment
which you would like to last forever? I believe the time will come when
your habitual
state of happiness and of satisfaction will be greater
than the happiest, gladdest moment you have ever experienced.
In an article in the Atlantic Monthly
entitled “Twenty Minutes of Reality,” the writer described an
experience he had while
convalescing in a hospital after a surgical operation.
It was a gray March day, with a cloudy sky. There was nothing unusually
exciting or exhilarating in the convalescent’s
immediate atmosphere or environment, when suddenly he felt as if he had
been
translated to a new world of light, happiness and joy.
“I cannot say what the mysterious
change was,” he said. “I saw no new thing, but I saw all the usual
things in a miraculous
new light—in what I believe is their true light. I saw
for the first time how wildly beautiful and joyous beyond all words
of mine to describe, is the whole of life. Every human
being moving across that porch, every sparrow that flew, every branch
tossing in the wind, was caught in and was a part of
the whole mad ecstasy of loveliness, of joy, of importance, of
intoxication,
of life. . . . For those glorified moments I was in
love with every living thing before me—the trees in the wind, the little
birds flying, the nurses, the interns, the people who
came and went. There was nothing that was alive that was not a miracle.
Just to be alive was in itself a miracle. My very soul
flowed out of me in a great joy.”
If it is possible to live in a world of happiness and beauty for twenty minutes, is it not possible to prolong the time—to
live always in such a world?
We are all seeking this enchanted world, but most of us in the same way that the little boy in the story sought it.
A poor little boy, so runs this old
story, once lived in a little weather-worn cottage on the top of a hill.
He was a dreamy
boy and every evening at sunset he would sit on the
doorstep looking down toward the valley, fascinated by a beautiful house
with wonderful golden windows shining a long way off
at the far end of the valley.
He was greatly dissatisfied with the
poverty of his surroundings, and the sight of the house in the valley,
where he had never
been, made him very unhappy. “Ah,” he would sigh,
“what a poor miserable home my hut is! If I could only live in that
beautiful
house with the golden windows how happy I should be!”
One evening when the golden windows,
more wonderful than ever, seemed beckoning him to come, the boy made up
his mind he would
go and visit the house beautiful. So, early next
morning he started out. The road was dusty and the sun was hot, but the
little
traveler trudged on and on. At length, toward sundown
he found himself at the far side of the valley. But what had become
of the beautiful house he had seen from his hill-top?
What he stood looking at was only an old tumble-down barn. And the
wonderful
windows? Alas, they were not gold at all, but just
ordinary glass, and dirty and broken, too.
Tired and thirsty, the little boy
flung himself on the ground with his back to the deserted barn, and
sobbed bitterly. Then,
slowly raising his head and looking up across the
valley, through blinding tears, he saw a shining blur, — his own little
cottage on the hill-top! And lo, its windows, in the
light of the setting sun, were a sheet of blazing gold!
How like this little boy we grown-ups
are! It is always the house in the distance that beckons. The beauty
and glory of life,
to our discontented, longing eyes, are always afar off
in some other place and time, somewhere else than just where we are
and in what we are doing. Some day we hope to enter
the house beautiful, but not today. We expect that in the future,
through
some magic or other, through money or what money can
purchase, we are going to find happiness. But no human being has ever
grasped the beautiful mirage which beckons him in the
distance.
Most of the people I know impress me
as being greatly disappointed with what life has given them. They have
not found any
such future as they anticipated. When they reached
those years which youth had pictured so free from care and anxiety, so
satisfying to their aspirations, they found existence
very ordinary, very tame, very commonplace, and far from happy. The
mirage which from a distance appeared so beautiful had
receded when they reached the spot from which it had beckoned, and
it was still beckoning from an ever receding beyond.
The chief cause of our discontent and
unhappiness is that hardly anyone is satisfied with what he has. The
little simple things
don’t count for anything with us. We are always
looking for some big thing to make us happy,—a fortune, some grand
opportunity,
and some indefinite happiness which we are at a loss
to describe. And we seem to think that whatever this thing is that is
going to make us really happy is always somewhere in
the shadowy future.
“It is the tormented spirit of man
that always strives to bend the universe to his desires,” says Dr. Frank
Crane. “Hence
most souls do not fit. They are at everlasting war
with fate. They do not understand how to be happy with what is, because
they are always straining for what is not.”
Some people don’t even know what they
are straining for. How many of the discontented people you have ever
met could give
you any intelligent idea of the cause of their
unhappiness? They know they are discontented, unhappy; many of them
chase the
world over, trying to discover something which is not
discoverable, which is only a by-product of a worthy deed; and this
by-product cannot be obtained until the deed is
performed.
We push and elbow our way through life and frantically struggle to get hold of things which we believe will make us happy,—and
behold, the moment we grasp them, the charm, with which our imagination had invested them, vanishes!
The thing we had set our heart on and
which we got into our possession yesterday is not the same thing today.
It does not
begin to give the pleasure which it promised, and we
are no nearer satisfaction than before. But our attention is quickly
attracted to something else, which we feel sure will
compensate for our disappointment, and we grasp at it only to repeat
the same experience—disappointment, disillusion. It
does not fill the void in our hearts.
There is ever an unsatisfied longing
which we spend our lives trying to fill. No matter what we may obtain in
the way of material
things, while we may get a certain sort of pleasure
and comfort from them, they do not satisfy the inward soul hunger. They
are like the different things which we take on a hot
day, instead of pure cold water, to quench our thirst. We think if we
could only get some soda-water, some ice cream, iced
tea or coffee it would satisfy our longing, but it does not. Nothing
but pure cold water will give the satisfaction we
crave. All substitutes for this simplest and most plentiful of all
beverages
lack something. They leave us unsatisfied, with a
longing for the genuine article.
Happiness is like water. There is no
substitute that will take its place. One of the strangest things in life
is the false
ideas everywhere prevalent regarding the nature of
happiness. The general belief seems to be that it is founded on things
that can be bought with money. The more money the more
things, and the more things the more enjoyment, the greater the degree
of happiness.
But money has never yet been known to
buy happiness. No one has ever yet found happiness by chasing it over
the earth. It
is not in our food, it is not in our drink, it is not
in our clothes or material possessions; it is not in excitement or a
constant round of pleasure. Happiness is born of right
living. It is the child of right thinking, and right acting, of helpful
service. A selfish life never knows real happiness.
Greed and envy never touch it.
Half the unhappiness in the world is caused by losing the blessings which would result from the enjoyment of what we have
in envying others and longing for what they have.
I know of a man and his family who a
few years ago were quite content in their little cottage in the country.
By some venture,
however, they happened to make a few thousand dollars
without working hard for it, and immediately a new longing sprang up
in their hearts for a life of ease and pleasure.
Immediately these people began to
dress more expensively and to struggle to get into the society of
wealthy people, to climb
socially. They strained in every way to keep up
appearances beyond their means. Envy and jealousy of those who were
better
off filled their hearts. The result was that in a
short time the old-time peace and harmony of the family life were
entirely
destroyed. The father’s business affairs became
involved by the strain to put his children on the same plane with those
of
larger means; debts piled up; everything they had was
mortgaged, until even their home was in danger, and was finally lost.
When the inevitable crash came it was
found that the mother, in her effort to marry her daughters into
families above them,
had run up big bills at dressmakers’, milliners’, and
florists’, and there was nothing left with which to save the home, which
was utterly wrecked.
“Half the world is on the wrong scent in the pursuit of happiness,” said Henry Drummond. “They think it consists in having
and getting and in being served by others. It consists in giving and in serving others.”
Happiness is something which is
released from our acts, and from our thoughts. A little of it here and a
little there is released
from our good deeds, our unselfish service, from our
right acts and thoughts. Some of it is released every time we help or
encourage another soul. A little of it is released
when we give a helping hand to those who have fallen under their
burdens.
A little of it is released from the sacrifices we make
for the advantage of others.
We get our happiness just as the bee
gets honey. The bee does not find honey ready made. It must work hard
for all it gathers.
It can only obtain a little from each flower it
visits. We do not get happiness ready made. We sip it from the flowers
of
life, and, like the bee, we must get a little
happiness honey here and a little there as we go through the garden of
life.
It is those who do most of the deeds which release
happiness, and get the largest aggregate of them in their lives, who
enjoy
the most and are the happiest.
Every noble deed, every unselfish
act, every bit of helpfulness to others, every good service to humanity,
every lofty aspiration
and helpful thought, good honest hard work which we
love, inevitably brings an amount of happiness which corresponds with
the unselfishness and the good intentions of the act.
Happiness is not a monopoly. No one can “corner” it. It is for sale in the market place of life for every one who is willing
to pay the price, and that is one which all can pay.
The great mass of people does not
extract ten per cent of the happiness possible in their everyday life,
largely because they
were never trained to think of the normal sources of
enjoyment. Their minds are blank, except for the little grooves which
their daily routine has stamped in their brain tissue.
They are as ignorant of their possible mental resources as the early
Indians were of the natural resources of this
continent, when the Puritans landed at Plymouth Rock.
Ruskin said he was not so much
surprised at what we suffer as at what we lose, which might furnish
infinite pleasure and satisfaction.
We hear a great deal about the enormous loss of our
natural resources, the coal, the water power, and the forests,—but they
are nothing compared to the loss in the possible
resources of happiness all around us.
The things which really make life
worth living are very common, and within the reach of all. How often we
hear the poor berating
the rich whom they envy, bemoaning the cruel fate that
has kept about everything worthwhile away from them, but when we stop
to take stock of life in the things that are really
worthwhile, that count for most, we are pretty nearly all on equal
footing.
The great Chemist himself has mixed
the atmosphere so that it is just adapted to create health, vigor,
robustness of body
and thought and exultant feeling for all alike. The
sunlight, with its marvelous chemistry, performs millions of miracles
every moment in root and rootlet, in plant and flower,
in tree, in animal life, in human life, while painting pictures of
glorious colorings, in flower, in plant, in landscape.
It has an inspiring effect, too, a beneficent influence on all life;
it makes all nature rejoice, and it warms the soul of
man. “I never look at a sunrise that it does not give me a sunrise
feeling,”
says John Wanamaker. And this glorious sun is a free
gift to all men.
So is time. The poorest, the humblest
person on earth has the same amount of precious time as the proudest
monarch or the
greatest money king. Andrew Carnegie said he would
give ten million dollars to have his life prolonged ten years; but all
his wealth cannot purchase an instant of time. Nor has
money power to purchase the best things of life, love, friendship,
sympathy. The sweetest, the most desirable things we
know are purchasable only with effort, with right conduct, right
thought,
right effort.
Lincoln said that “folks are usually
about as happy as they make up their minds to be.” The experience of the
writer of “Twenty
Minutes of Reality,” as well as that of thousands of
others that might be cited, shows that the possibilities of happiness
are not in things or in the possession of them; that
happiness is not outside of us, but inside.
Everywhere people are hunting the
world over for what is really in themselves, because everything is
tinted, modified, shaped
by what we bring to it by our mentality. If we bring
beauty to it, we find that it is beautiful. If we bring an ugly mental
attitude to it, it is ugly and disappointing. The
source of all happiness is inside the individual. The beauty we see in
nature
and the beauty we feel in music are inside of us. We
all know how all nature, the very landscape, seems to laugh with us when
we rejoice, seems to exult with us when we are glad,
and the very sun and the flowers seem to reflect our joy.
The world is a whispering gallery which sends back the echo of our own voice. It is a mirror which reflects the face that
looks in it. If we laugh, it laughs back; if we frown, it reflects a frown.
Happiness is the reaction of our
mental attitude and our acts upon others. It is what they fling back to
us that makes us
happy or miserable. The door between us and Heaven or
happiness cannot be open when the door between us and our fellow men
is closed.
Right thinking means right action. If
we would only hold the right thought, the constructive thought, the
happy thought, the
joy thought, the helpful thought, the unselfish
thought each day, we should all soon become supremely happy, because,
finally,
happiness is a mental state. Your degree of happiness
or misery today is merely a resultant of your thought. If such a large
part of our days were not filled with discordant
thoughts, worry thoughts, fear thoughts, envy, jealousy, hatred
thoughts,
perhaps half unconsciously much of the time, we would
be happy instead of miserable.
“Seek ye first the kingdom of God and
His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” When
we realize the
kingdom of God or heaven, that is, the kingdom of
harmony, we are in a position to attract everything else that is
desirable.
Christ meant that when we have put ourselves into
harmony with the great Source of supply, when we have become conscious
of
our oneness with the One, in other words, when we
reach the cosmic consciousness, we are right in the midst of the
all-supply.
One would think that after all these
centuries of searching for happiness it would have been found by the
great mass of human
beings, but how few have yet found it! We have not
found it because we have not understood the perfect truth of Christ’s
philosophy,
“The kingdom of God is within you.”
All through history man has been
hunting for this kingdom of God outside of himself. Multitudes have
thought that wealth would
furnish the key to this kingdom, which would supply
all of his wants. He has looked for this marvelous paradise everywhere
but the right place,— within himself.
Divinely fathered and mothered by his
Maker, placed in an earthly paradise, infinitely more beautiful, more
glorious than
any human imagination could conceive, made lord over a
world filled with everything necessary to make human beings ideally
happy and ideally successful, yet, after centuries of
race evolution, centuries of groping after ideal conditions, centuries
of searching for his highest good, man is still
dissatisfied. The average man is a god playing the fool. He is still
looking
for happiness outside of himself.
If we had found the kingdom of heaven
within, our faces would be so lighted up that we would give the
impression to everybody
we met that we had just come into possession of some
great good fortune, something that had made us exquisitely happy.
You know how pleased people appear
when they have come into possession of that which they have struggled
for all their lives,
people who have perhaps been poor and tried hard to
get on, but who barely managed to make a living, and have suddenly
fallen
heirs to a fortune. How changed the appearance of the
whole family! There is an unwonted light in their eyes. Hope has taken
the place of despair. Buoyancy and gayety have taken
the place of heaviness and gloom. In other words, they have all at once
become new creatures. The light of happiness shines
through their flesh, looks out of their eyes.
This is how we should all impress one
another. Instead of looking miserable and forlorn, God’s children ought
to look as though
they were supremely happy. Their physical eyes should
reflect an entrancing beauty which their inward eyes should behold.
Through their faces should shine that inner vision
which the soul should sense. If we had found the kingdom of heaven
within
us the countenance of every human being would reflect a
superb satisfaction, a harmony, a blessedness which only very few
mortals have ever yet reflected.
It is possible for every one to have
that harmonious spirit which finds serenity and true happiness in the
life he is living
daily, through the resources of his own soul. The new
philosophy is not that of happiness postponed to a future life, but
happiness to be realized here and now—not a far away
personal immortality, but immortality in an increasingly happier
humanity.
One of the most unfortunate things that ever happened to the race was the teaching of the doctrine that heaven is not to be
enjoyed on earth, that it is something way beyond, and that we must die to reach it.
The whole teaching of the theologians
looked towards the life beyond, the life to come, every desirable thing
was in the future.
The present was not anything like as important to them
as the future. Man was simply passing through a very disagreeable
probationary
state which was to decide his future for all eternity.
Life was a very serious matter to them, and religion was still more
serious.
The theologians of the past never
dreamed that happiness is one of the great essentials of living; one
that plays a tremendous
part in health, efficiency and general normality. Many
of them thought that the tendency to play was an indication of satanic
tendencies which were subversive of religion. They
didn’t think man had any right in this probationary period of his
existence
to spend precious time in playing. It never seemed to
occur to them that the suppression of the play instinct develops
abnormal
tendencies which often lead to insanity and
degeneracy.
Practically all of the Puritans
suffered from the curse of fear, which darkened all their lives. The
majority of them did
not know what real happiness meant. Their faces wore
an anxious and sad expression. There was little or no joy in their lives
because their natural love of humor and fun was
constantly suppressed.
Think of the effect on a sensitive
mind of the belief that an infant which had not been baptized, though it
had never come
to the years of understanding, did not know how to
reason, and knew nothing about religion, could be punished forever and
ever, and that hell was paved with infants’ skulls! It
was such a horrible doctrine to inject into the child nature that it
seems unthinkable such a thing could be possible.
For centuries the clergy were
constantly cautioning men and women against the play instinct, reminding
them that it was the
food of evil forces. A long, sober, sad face was
regarded as a sign of piety. People who laughed and played much, who
enjoyed
having a good time, were believed to be on the road to
destruction, and were often told that the devil was after them.
There was a great deal of the sad and
morose in the old theology. Think of men living in unventilated
cloisters, breathing
impure air, living in an absolutely abnormal way,
almost entirely secluded from human society, and suppressing completely
their normal instincts, writing theology, making
creeds for the great throbbing mass of humanity! These men were in no
condition
to produce anything that was normal for they were not
normal themselves. Christ did not seclude himself, he lived in the open,
mingled with the common people, was one with them.
What he taught was natural, was wholesome. But what a monk in a
cloister,
shut out from the world, apart from active life, not
in touch at all with the mass of his fellow creatures, could produce
under such conditions could not be anything but sad,
morose, abnormal, not at all suited to people who were living normally.
The saddest note in human life has been the theological note, and nothing has been so distorted, so garbled, and so botched
as the theologians’ idea of man’s relation to his God.
The Creator made man for a normal life of work and enjoyment, made him to be gloriously happy. He made him to be whole, strong,
and ideally perfect. Any deviation from God’s plan is man’s fault.
Did you ever stop to think how many
times the sacred writers told us to be glad, to rejoice always? In
“Pollyanna” the play
which for months held immense audiences in New York
spellbound, Pollyanna, that child of gladness, says: “If God took the
trouble to tell us eight hundred times to be glad and
rejoice, He must want us to do it—some.”
“Rejoice evermore.” “Let the heart of
them rejoice that seek the Lord,” “The joy of the Lord is your
strength.” “Rejoice in
the Lord always; again I say rejoice.” “And your joy
no man shall take from you.” “And your joy shall be full.”
Again and again these and similar
expressions are repeated all through the Bible. We are not only told to
rejoice and be glad,
but “to rejoice and be exceeding glad.” Surely God
must have meant it—some. Struggles, disappointments, difficulties, are
not meant to make us sad, but to make us strong—for if
we don’t whine and complain, we shall be given strength to overcome
all these.
When I hear people grumbling and
complaining about trifles and magnifying molehills into mountains, I
always think of an old
lady whose life had been full of sorrows and
disappointments, but who never lost her cheerfulness and serenity. Being
asked
one day the secret of her sweet optimism, she replied,
“I keep a pleasure book. Early in life, I resolved that every night
I would record some pleasant experience which had come
to me during the day. This has given me the habit of looking for the
glad things instead of the sad ones in my life. And
so, no matter how dark the clouds, I have always been able to see a bit
of sunlight shining through.”
Many days, she said, it was hard to
see the light because she had had a large family, and had lost every
member of it. In
addition she had much illness, and many financial
losses which left her very poor. But in spite of her afflictions and her
poverty she had managed to find something to be
thankful for every day of her life.
People who take life sadly, who see
nothing “to rejoice and be glad” about, not only lose a tremendous
amount of pleasure,
real enjoyment, but they seriously cripple their
ability and impair their success. They are not normal, and, therefore,
cannot
reach their maximum of strength and efficiency.
When I see people with gloomy minds
attuned to sadness, who dwell exclusively on the serious side of life, I
always feel like
turning them around so that they will face towards the
light, so that they will look at life in a hopeful, expectant, happy
way, and let their shadows all fall behind them.
Mr. Schwab has always been a splendid
example of the philosophy of happiness. He is one of the happiest men I
have ever met!
In his younger days when he was struggling to get a
foothold in business he was always bubbling over with happiness. This
constant flow of good spirits was one of the first
things that attracted Mr. Carnegie’s attention. In the days of strike
troubles
at the Homestead works it was young Schwab’s merry
temper that kept Mr. Carnegie from giving way to serious despondency.
When
the ironmaster felt very blue over the situation, the
young man would sing Scotch songs for him and cheer him up, so that
Mr. Carnegie would slap him on the shoulder and say,
“You’re all right, Charles, you’re all right !“
Over-seriousness depresses the mental
faculties and tends to lower efficiency. It is the man who sings at his
work, the one
who is bubbling over with gladness, with a sense of
abounding vitality that is the normal, healthful, successful man.
Life should be full of play, even of
fun, full of light and cheer. It would be if we knew how to live. If,
like the old lady
who kept the pleasure book, and Pollyanna, the glad
girl, we make a habit of looking for something to be glad about, we
shall
very soon master the secret of happiness.
Let us “rejoice and be glad.” Let us cry with Pollyanna, “Just be glad—that’s the game.”
Discouragement, A Disease — How To Cure It
Discouragement flies before the thought of God, when we become conscious of our partnership with Him.
Eight hundred and sixty men, women
and children on the average in New York City commit suicide every
year—much more than two
a day. In one year Bellevue Hospital treated two
hundred and thirty-five people who had tried to kill themselves. In
other
large cities of the world the suicide toll is even
larger than in New York.
It is estimated that more than fifteen thousand people commit suicide each year in the United States. In the entire civilized
world, a million people each year—more than five hundred a day—are guilty of self-destruction!
Just think of the tragedy of it,—one suicide every three minutes somewhere on the earth!
Since life is so precious to the
normal man that even the basest criminals count the days and the hours
before their execution,
dreading the cutting off of life even in a prison
cell, why do so many people take their own lives? Because they are
discouraged.
The psychological aspect of the suicide has never been properly studied, but in nine cases out of ten, if not in every case,
discouragement is the cause of self-destruction.
Not long ago a young musician in New
York, in a fit of despondency, committed suicide. He was so poor that he
had been obliged
to pawn his violin. Discouraged at his lack of success
and filled with fear at the possibility of not being able to redeem
his beloved violin, which was a very rare one, he
decided that life under such conditions was not worth living, and then
and
there ended it.
These crises on the mental or physical plane are a part of every life. How we meet them is the test of our courage, the measure
of our faith in God and our conscious oneness with Him.
In a description of his sensations
under fire a British officer fighting in northern France in the great
war said, “There’s
a good deal of rot talked of heroism at present. If it
is all true, there are many millions of heroes in Europe just now,
and I leave that to you. I’ve found it harder to go
straight in life than to go under fire.”
We are “under fire” all our lives,
and the real hero is the one who keeps straight on in spite of
discouragements and disappointments,
never losing one jot of heart or courage, never giving
way to despair, trusting always in the Divine Power that will lead
him to his goal.
Many a talented young artist has
given up in despair because critics discouraged him, told him, perhaps,
that he did not belong
to any established school, and that if he did not
follow the conventional rules of art he would not be recognized. These
discouraged
souls did not realize that the one who listens to the
voice in his own soul, and who, trusting to the power within, blazes
a new path, is the one who most certainly attains
distinction.
When Ole Bull first came to this
country, musical critics said he would make no great impression here.
They predicted that
his American debut would be a failure because he
violated so many of the laws of musical composition, that a certain
violinist,
popular at the time, was head and shoulders above him
and that he would stand no chance in competition with him. The name
of that man who was so technically perfect, but who
lacked Ole Bull’s soul, is not known to the public today, while the name
of Ole Bull is enshrined immortally in the minds of
American people— in the minds of all peoples.
Discouragement is one of the greatest
of human enemies. It is an unmitigated curse. It has done more to dwarf
the efforts
of the race, has thwarted more careers, stunted and
starved more lives, ruined more creative power than any other one agent.
It is a disease that is well-nigh universal in some
form. Everybody suffers more or less from it, is the victim of its
poison.
It bombards us from within and without.
There are always plenty of people who
will attack you from without, who will see reasons why you will not
succeed in your
undertaking, who will tell you that it is impossible
to overcome the obstacles in your way, and unless you have a sublime
faith in yourself and a resolution which knows no
retreat, which takes no backward steps, you are likely to become
discouraged
and then sidetracked.
Discouragement, however, comes most
frequently from within, and causes more poverty and crime than almost
any other one thing.
It is an indirect producer of poverty, because it
paralyzes ability and blights efficiency. A person is in no position to
produce anything when his mind is full of doubt and
fear. When suffering from discouragement one’s whole being is negative,
demoralized. Courage, the leader of the mental
faculties, is paralyzed, and the judgment is not sound. No man is level
headed
when he is discouraged or blue. He is in no condition
to look squarely at an issue, because his reasoning powers are dulled
and his enthusiasm is dampened. In other words, there
is anarchy in the whole mental kingdom and, until the order is restored
and courage again leads the way, the faculties will
not respond with their best.
This was recently illustrated by the
suicide of a man who feared he could not raise the thirteen thousand
dollars he believed
he needed to save himself from ruin. In settling up
his estate, however, it was found that the man was not in straitened
circumstances
and did not really need any such amount to keep his
business going.
Time and again it has been found that
people who lost heart under fire were just this side of victory over
their difficulties
when they threw down their weapons and gave up the
battle in despair. How often has a letter or a telegram with good news
that would have heartened and encouraged a discouraged
one to fight on, come just after the sufferer had ended it all! How
often has a friend bearing relief come just after the
irrevocable deed had been done!
Yet we continue to read daily in the
newspapers of people, young and old, who lose faith and commit suicide
because of failure
in business, loss of property, loss of friends,
trouble in the home, disappointment in love—for a thousand and one
reasons.
But they may nearly all be summed up under the one
head— discouragement.
And what is this Moloch to which so
many lives are sacrificed? It is simply a diseased mind. Discouragement
is a mental disease.
It is just as truly a disease as smallpox, typhoid,
scarlet fever, or any other ailment which physicians diagnose as
physical
disease. Discouragement is much worse than any of
these because it so often unbalances the sufferer and drives him to
crime,
or to drink and consequent failure and misery.
A letter just received from a young man who is undergoing a term of imprisonment for robbery shows how easily discouragement
drives some minds off the right path.
“When we make our slips, our bad
breaks and unfortunate ventures, our bad decisions,” he writes, “we are
in a more or less
discouraged, despondent and unbalanced state, and are
willing to do almost anything to get rid of our fears and anxieties
for the moment. When our minds are negative we are
always cowards.”
This young man had been out of work
for a long time, and when a shiftless station agent with whom he was
acquainted loaned
him his keys, he stole a book of Wells Fargo Express
money orders from the station and succeeded in passing some of them
before
he was arrested. He says that the awful price he has
had to pay for his slip has taught him that it is infinitely easier to
do right than wrong, and that when he leaves prison he
is determined to do his best to redeem his past.
Another young man who was on the verge of discouragement tells how he was turned right about face by the appearance and the
story of one who had fallen a victim to the discouragement disease.
This young man who was in business in
New York had had such a severe setback when the Great War broke out
that he was just
ready to give up the struggle. Quite disheartened he
sat down one day on a bench in Madison Square to decide just how he
would
wind up the business in which he had practically
failed and also to decide what he would do next.
While sitting there thinking the matter over a ragged, dejected tramp came along and sat down beside him. The man was evidently
a victim of drink and all sorts of dissipation, and looked as though he was near a complete collapse.
The young man, noticing his
companion’s wretched appearance, asked him how he happened to be in such
a predicament. The tramp,
whose quick intelligence saw at once that there was
something very serious on his questioner’s mind, instead of replying to
his question asked him in turn what his trouble was.
The young man frankly confessed that his business was ruined, and that he didn’t know what he was going to do. Then the tramp
looking him straight in the eye said: “My friend, do you realize how rich you are compared with me?
“You have youth, health, and
strength. Your vitality has not been sapped by dissipation. You have
everything to live for,
and as you value your life, don’t give way to
discouragement. That was what ruined me. I am a well-educated man, and
was once
a prosperous one. But years ago, after a business
failure, in such a crisis as you are now facing, I lost my pluck and
thought
whiskey would brace me up, temporarily, until I could
get on my feet again. It did. I had never drank before, and at first
it seemed to me that I had found a very valuable aid,
something which would give me courage, strength, initiative, something
which would help me to dare to take chances, which I
had previously shrunk from. For a time whiskey seemed to me to be the
elixir of life.
“It braced up all my faculties and,
apparently, doubled my brain power. But I had to keep increasing the
quantity I took to
get the desired effects, and then all at once I found
my will power was weakening, and the courage which whiskey had
temporarily
stimulated gradually lessened until I had less than
before. Then I began to see what whiskey was really doing and resolved
many times to quit it. But the awful craving, the
cruel thirst for drink, together with my increasing despondency and
weakened
will power, got the better of me and I drank again and
again until I could not quit. And now, look at me! I am a wreck,
without
hope, without a future!
“But you have most of your life
before you and really have nothing to be discouraged about. You have
done nothing dishonest
or disgraceful. The only disgrace is in quitting after
failure. And there is no failure that can not be retrieved. Men who
have done great things, made stepping stones of their
failures. The disgrace is not in falling, but in not rising every time
you fall.
Brace up, and remember that, ‘Not failure, but low aim is crime.’”
The young man was deeply impressed by
the story of his unfortunate companion. The evidences of superior
intelligence and education
still manifest in the poor human wreck appalled him,
and he said to himself, “If this unhappy wretch can still look at life
in that way, can see its great possibilities, there is
certainly something left for me.” And after doing what he could to
help the man who had tried to help him, he went out of
Madison Square a new man, with new resolution in his face, a new
courage
and determination in his heart.
He is now a prosperous man, and he
says, “I attribute a large part of my success to the stimulus imparted
at a critical moment
by that unfortunate fellow who had given way to
discouragement and sacrificed everything that life held dear to the
thing
which had enslaved him.”
Victims of discouragement little
realize the tremendous damage they are doing to themselves when they
allow this fatal enemy
of their happiness, and their efficiency, to get
lodgment in their mind. Nobody does good work when discouraged. There is
no spontaneity in it, no resourcefulness, no
inventiveness, no originality, and no enthusiasm. It is mechanical,
life-less.
The moment you yield to
discouragement all your mental faculties become depressed. You lose
power. Your initiative is paralyzed,
your executive ability strangled. You are in no
condition to do anything effectively. Your whole mentality is placed at a
tremendous disadvantage, and until this enemy is
driven out of your mind, neutralized by the affirmation and the
contemplation
of its opposites—of courage, cheer, hope, and a
vigorous expectation of splendid things to come—you are in no condition
to
do good work.
Every suggestion of discouragement,
of fear of failure, is a destructive force, and in the degree that we
allow ourselves
to be influenced by it will it tear down and retard
our life processes, our life work. It will darken the mind and cause one
to make fatally wrong decisions, to take steps which
may ruin one’s happiness, one’s whole life.
Many divorces are the result of
unfortunate decisions to marry when girls were discouraged, when they
could not see any other
way out of their difficulties. I have known of many
girls, after some great sorrow had come to them, marrying men whom they
could never have been induced to marry in happier
days. They had lost a mother, or a father, or some calamity had
overtaken
the family, and the girls consented to marry men they
did not love in order to relieve the suffering of those dear to them,
or because there seemed to be no other resource for
themselves in a difficult situation. They were willing to do anything
to get rid of the thing that was perplexing and
troubling them at the time. Like sufferers from sea sickness they felt
their
troubles never would pass away.
It is characteristic of seasickness
that the victim cannot see any end to his misery. Try as he will to
imagine himself well
in so many days or hours, he cannot do it. This
hopelessness is in some degree characteristic of sick people generally.
They
cannot seem to picture themselves as strong and well
again. When suffering extreme pain of any sort, such as a severe
toothache,
for instance, it is difficult to believe that it will
ever cease.
Still more difficult is it to try to
picture an end to mental suffering. When trials and troubles come to us,
when overwhelmed
with sorrow, when death comes into our home and
snatches away some dear one, it is very difficult to see through the
storm,
to pierce the black clouds and see the healing sun
behind them. Struggling with the sorrow of that great loss in our life,
it doesn’t seem as though we could ever be happy
again. When so suffering we wonder in a sort of dumb resentment how
other
people can possibly be laughing, having a good time,
going to theaters, dances, enjoying life as usual. It seems cruel,
almost,
for others to enjoy when we feel as though we could
never even smile again.
But we know that time heals the deepest sorrows, that physical and mental ills pass away, and that the brave soul is the one
that adapts itself to the storms and sunshine of life.
Just as on a tropical summer day when
the sun is suddenly blotted out of the heavens and the whole sky is so
blackened by
a sudden storm that we are obliged to light our homes
and offices, and presently the clouds pass as quickly as they came and
the sun blazes forth in all its glory just as though
nothing had happened, so there come times in our lives when everything
appears black and threatening, and then, suddenly,
just as in nature, all becomes serene again.
The great thing for us to keep in mind when a life storm breaks is that, no matter how violent, it is only temporary and that
behind the clouds the sun is always shining.
The new philosophy helps us to
conquer discouragement by putting the emphasis on the right things, the
things that are worthwhile.
This is why we generally do not go to pieces when we
happen to fail in our vocation. We have learned that material things
are not the first essentials. We know that the great
emphasis should be placed upon the life, the reality of man, which is
divine. We know that a person can be a tremendous
success although he has not a dollar in the world, though he has no
home,
no abiding place, no money, and dies in the poorhouse.
In other words, the new philosophy teaches that real success does not
consist in accumulating mere things.
It is a matter of personality and
character. The accumulation of money is a side issue; the making of a
living is a mere incidental
to making a life. Time and again I have known people
to go through what in the old thought would have been the most
humiliating
failures, failures which would probably have wrecked
their lives and entirely destroyed their confidence in themselves. But
in the new philosophy these things do not touch the
soul. They are not realities in the highest sense.
None of Mr. Rockefeller’s money touches the real Rockefeller. The reality of him is spiritual, is mental. It is mind, it is
soul, it is God, and it is this reality of us that the new philosophy emphasizes.
God never intended that his children
should go to pieces mentally and physically, be miserable and unhappy,
that they should
suffer mortification and chagrin when they have been
honest and have done the best they could do, just because they have
failed
in their particular undertakings.
We were made to hold up our heads, to
look the world in the face without flinching, as princes of the Most
High. No matter
what happens to our material possessions, if we have
made good as men, as women, if we have been dead-in-earnest in
delivering
to the world the message we were sent here to deliver,
there is no reason why we should feel humiliated or discouraged about
anything.
There is only one thing that should make a man hang his head and feel humiliated, discouraged, only one thing that should
make him wince when the world looks him in the face and that is his own wrong doing, his own sin.
There is a vast amount of splendid
unused success material in the “down and outs,” in the people who have
lost their grip
upon themselves because they have lost their courage.
Some of them while out of work, suffering from discouragement, did
something
which caused them to lose their self-respect and now
discouragement has become a disease with them. It has become chronic
and no one can succeed with a discouraged mental
attitude.
Courage is the leader in the mental
realm, and when that is down all the other faculties drop in sympathy.
Until courage says
the word, neither initiative nor any of the other
faculties will take a step forward. They refuse to work under
discouragement.
But when courage leads the way, all the others brace
up and come to the rescue in team work.
What most people in the great failure
army need is to have their courage restored, renewed. The discouraged
have their backs
turned toward the light, so that all the black shadows
fall across their path. They are walking in their own shadows instead
of in the glorious sun of God’s light and love. Their
disease has made them morbid. They need mental treatment, treatment
that will let the light into their souls and show them
what they still can do.
Emerson says, “What I need is
somebody who will make me do what I can.” What these discouraged ones
need is somebody who can
make them do what they can. They need to be turned
around mentally. They need to be shown that they are not failures, but
that they are mentally ill, sufferers from chronic
discouragement.
There is one who can do this for you who are discouraged better than anyone else—your own higher self.
No matter how old you may be, or how
depressing your present condition, if you take this other, higher self
for your guide,
you can recover your footing. And when you once get a
glimpse of your real self, your real possibilities and assets, when
you once get a glimpse of your divinity, and realize
that you are a god in the making, that you are intended to be a glorious
success instead of a miserable failure, you will jump
back a quarter of a century or more and start life anew. Your courage
will be restored and you will see life in a new light.
You will see yourself as you never saw yourself before, you will get
hold of yourself and your mental and physical
resources as you never did before, you will make tremendous leaps
forward. You
will have a new motive for redeeming your past, you
will have a new outlook on life, new hope; in other words, you will be
a new creature. You will put off the old man, and
never again will be content to grovel, never again be content with your
second best. Then only your highest and best will
satisfy you, and you will strive to make your highest moments permanent.
The very consciousness of having lost so many years
will be an additional prod to your endeavor.
You can begin now to make good. Lift
up your head and face toward the light. Quit fretting and complaining of
your ill luck
and be the poised, harmonious soul, the brave,
successful, happy being the Creator planned. Cure yourself of your
disease
by conquering your mental enemies. You can drive out
fear, worry, the “blues” and all discouragement, all the enemies of your
success and happiness, by claiming your inheritance
and asserting your kinship with God. Say to yourself:
“The truth of my being, the reality
of me, is God. Why then should I be discouraged about anything? The
Creator never intended
me to express pessimism, doubt, discouragement or
despondency, and I will have nothing more to do with them. I was
intended
to express joy and success, not gloom and failure. I
am victory organized. I was planned to win out in life, not to be
defeated.
I was born for happiness, not for misery, for peace
and serenity, not for perpetual anxiety and discouragement. There is
something
inside of me which tells me that I am bigger than
circumstances, that nothing but my own consent can keep me in poverty
and
wretchedness, that there is no destiny which can keep
me down, for I am my own destiny.
“I am a son of God, and I was never
made to cower, to slink, to be discouraged, afraid of anything. I am one
with my Father,
and co-heir with Christ of all that He has. I do not
fear want or failure. Fear is not an attribute of divinity, and has no
place in my life. I am brave, courageous, a conqueror,
and not a slave of circumstances. I am free and not bond. I will not
allow my efficiency to be strangled, my hopes for the
future blighted, my life to be spoiled by any form of discouragement
or cowardice. I am courage, strength, confidence,
masterfulness. Discouragement has no power over me, because it is not a
reality. It is a mere bogey of the mind, a ghost of
the imagination. This discouraged, yellow streak in my nature is really
a reflection upon my Creator, an indication that I
lack confidence in Him, that I am not sure that He can protect me. It is
an intimation that I believe there is a greater power
than His and that an evil one.
“No matter how many troubles or
difficulties threaten, it is my business to trust, and not to fear, and
from now on I shall
do so. I shall hold a poised, serene mind, and shall
lie down at night with confidence and assurance that my life, my welfare
and my destiny are all in the hands of Him who
controls everything and who doeth all things well.”
Remember that whatever you dread,
fear, you are attracting, because the mind always relates with whatever
dominates the thought.
That which we think most about we tend to get, and it
is the easiest thing in the world to kill the possibility of realizing
our ambitions and drawing to us the thing we fear by
holding it in mind, by allowing doubt thoughts, anxious, discouraged
thoughts to get possession of us and strangle our
efficiency.
When in danger of giving way to
discouragement, you will find a wonderful help in eliminating everything
which stands between
you and your Maker, and to allow free access to the
flow of divine power. When one is thoroughly alive to the consciousness
that he is supported by this divine power, in so far
as he trusts it, and that it will rush to his assistance in any
emergency
or trouble, he is neither afraid nor discouraged.
All our discouragement and anxieties
come from a feeling of separateness from our Creator and the consequent
consciousness
of weakness, of not being sufficiently protected, the
feeling that we are standing alone. One who lives in conscious union
with his Maker rises above disappointments and
discouragements, and develops a hopeful, optimistic philosophy. Such a
one
sees in all his experiences, no matter how trying,
growth and enlargement. He sees in the overcoming of life’s problems an
opportunity to become a full, complete man. He rises
above circumstances, while those who do not see any saving, stimulating
influences in their trials and disappointments are
simply crushed by them.
What a superb sight is a soul who has
ridden triumphantly through the storms of life, who has developed a
beautiful, cheerful
philosophy, who instead of being crushed by his trials
and hardships has built them into a tower of hope and strength!
Compare such a man, who bears his
burdens uncomplainingly, who laughs at difficulties and keeps pushing
ahead as best he can,
trying to make each day a real victory in his life,
performing as nearly as possible a human being’s ideal duty, to the one
who curses his fate, rails at his ill luck, and
grumbles at the burdens which are crushing him!
When things have gone wrong with you;
when you are ready to give way to discouragement, think of these two
pictures, and turn
about face and vigorously assert your manhood or your
womanhood. Declare your power to conquer your difficulty, whatever it
may be. Say to yourself:
“Now it is right up to me to make
good. I can’t give way to discouragement, show the white feather, and
yet keep my self-respect.
I am able to overcome this thing; it has no power to
keep me down. No matter whether I can see the way out or not I shall
trust in God, keep going, and forge ahead. No matter
what opposes, I shall keep the rudder of my ship headed toward the port.
“I will quit this everlasting
self-depreciation, for it is a crime against my Maker as well as myself,
and I will believe
that what the Creator has made and pronounced good is
so. I am done with this putting myself on a bargain counter. I am no
longer going about the earth making the impression
that I have a skim-milk opinion of myself. No more of the poorhouse
attitude
for me. There are better things waiting for me than
that. I am a prince, and I have inherited princely things. I have a
princely
inheritance.
“I know that every time I say ‘I
can’t do this,’ or ‘I can’t do that,’ ‘I can’t afford this,’ or ‘I can’t
afford that,’ I
undermine my power. Hereafter I am going to deal in
positives, in affirmations of power—’I can,’ ‘I will,’ ‘I am able.’
Henceforth
I will have nothing to do with negatives that tear
down, destroy.
“If I am part of Reality; if I have
existed millions of years, and will continue to exist for untold ages to
come; if my existence
is from everlasting to everlasting, why should I be
anxious, alarmed? Why should I be perturbed about temporary happenings,
the mere accidents of everyday life? They have no
power over me. I am a part of the divine Entity. My being is beyond the
possibility of destruction or change. There is
something in me that is absolutely indestructible, and I shall not get
into
a flurry of uneasiness. become discouraged by what I
can really control. I know I am anchored eternally. Therefore, I will
allow nothing to trouble or disturb me. Henceforth
nothing will. I stand firm in this resolve.”
Multitudes of people find great help
and comfort in repeating such Bible promises as these: “He that dwelleth
in the secret
place of the Most High shall abide under the shadow of
the Almighty.” “He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his
wings shalt thou trust; his truth shall be thy shield
and buckler.” “There shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague
come nigh thy dwelling.”
What a solvent for discouragement and the “blues,” what a healing for all heart hurts are found in these wonderful promises!
The habit of driving out of our
consciousness every suggestion of failure, of disappointment, of
discouragement or evil by
substituting its opposite is of inestimable value. The
ability to do this, to clarify the mind of everything which can
possibly
injure it, is the secret of all success and happiness.
The scientific fact that the mind can
not contain at the same moment opposite thoughts or emotions makes us
absolute masters
of our fate. To live upward or downward, to be a
success or a failure is simply a matter of choice. It all depends on the
suggestions we assimilate, the kind of thought we
prefer.
We can allow ourselves to be
overwhelmed by discouragement, or we can rise above it, just as we
decide. It is natural for
all of us to think of the wonderful things we would do
if we could only get rid of the things that block our way and defeat
our possible successes. If we did not have to struggle
with disappointments, with heartaches, with trials and troubles of
all sorts, what a triumphant journey life would be!
Yet the real test of your bigness is whether or not you will fulfill
your
ambition to the letter, whether you will carry out
your great life plan grandly and superbly regardless of things that are
apparently trying to down you.
Nothing will help more to overcome
discouragement than the suggestion of courage or success. The
constructive force of the
positive thought will not only drive out the negative
thought, but it will up build and strengthen all the faculties.
Every human being can increase his
courage and multiply his strength by frequently saying to himself: “I am
a child of the
King of Kings, and have nothing to fear. If I always
do the best I can in all circumstances, there is no reason why I should
ever be anxious about the results. I shall not. I am
courage, I am success. Nothing can harm me because I am one with the
One, I cannot want, I cannot fail, because I am in
touch with the Infinite Source of all life.”
The Force That Moves Mountains
Faith moves mountains.
“To him that believeth, all things are possible.” The man who does not believe in something and believe in it with all his
soul is a pretty poor stick.
Let nothing undermine your faith in
your ultimate triumph. Hold this tenaciously, vigorously, intensely, and
after awhile
you will see things coming your way. Don’t be afraid
to think too highly of yourself. If the Creator made you and is not
ashamed
of the job, certainly you should not be. He pronounced
His work good, and you should respect it.
Faith increases confidence, carries
conviction, multiplies ability. Faith doesn’t think or guess. It sees
the way out. It
is not discouraged or blinded by mountains of
difficulties, because it sees through them—sees the goal beyond.
There are marvelous utilities,
infinite good, and unspeakable beauties in the great cosmic
intelligence, the unseen world,
ready for our use and enjoyment. If we only had
sufficient faith to believe they were there we could draw them to
ourselves.
Writing of heroes discovered by the world war, Edmund Riemper Broadus says:
“There are stories of the heroism of
‘our boys’ that stir us beyond words—stories, too, that change with
astonishing abruptness
our estimates of those whom we had too lightly
regarded. There was a certain youth, for example, for whom I fear that I
had
scant respect during his student life; a sickly fellow
with rather a hang-dog air. He was out of his classes a good deal of
the time and he was not successful in examinations. I
believe that I suspected him of malingering. He tried to enlist and
was turned down by the medical inspector, and tried
again and yet again without success. How he ever got in, nobody could
understand; but one day he went, and we shook our
heads and prophesied that he would be incapacitated in a week or two. We
heard no more of him until word came in letters from
his friends that he had quietly picked up a smoking bomb and thrown it
clear of the trench before it exploded, and then had
climbed out in the face of the flying bullets and brought in a wounded
comrade. And this was he who had only last year seemed
such a faint-hearted traveler along life’s common way!”
Every now and then, like this writer,
we are amazed at some youth we knew, starting out all at once and doing
some tremendous
thing which we did not believe was possible to him. He
may not have had any more ability, perhaps not as much, as those around
him, but he had a superb self-faith, which enabled him
to dare and do, when the more timid ones, even perhaps, with far
superior
ability, hesitated, wavered, did not dare to attempt
what in reality they were able to do.
It is faith that everywhere does the “impossible.” It is faith in God and faith in oneself, a divine self-confidence that
makes men gods, whose will must be obeyed.
If it were not for wrong thinking
such faith would be the rule in human life instead of the exception, for
“God hath not given
us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and
of a sound mind.” Unfortunately most of us measure ourselves by our
weakness instead of by our strength. We estimate
ourselves at our worst instead of our best. We seem to think that the
vision
of ourselves we see in our optimistic, hopeful,
uplifted moments is a mere mirage of the imagination, and not our real
selves.
Comparatively few people realize how
much self-faith has to do with achievement. The great majority never
seem to think that
it is a real creative force. Yet faith is not only a
real power, but one of the greatest we know. In fact, men do great
things
in proportion to the intensity and the persistency of
their faith.
When Goliath, the great giant of
Gath, came to the Israelite camp, with his pretentious boasting,
challenging the Israelites
to select a man to fight with him, to determine
whether they or the Philistines should be conquerors, the Israelites
were
so terrified that none dared offer to do battle with
him.
Later, when he returned to repeat his
challenge, a mere youth, David, heard his boasting, and took up his
challenge. After
much pleading with his elders for the privilege, the
youth was allowed to go fight the giant. They insisted, however, on
putting
him in heavy armor, as a protection for his body, and
placing a sword in his hand before he went to meet his foe. But he said
to them: “I am not used to these things, I cannot
fight with these handicaps. These are not my weapons. I have other
weapons
with which to fight the giant.” So he took off all of
his armor and went forth with no other weapon than a simple sling and
a few pebbles which he took from the brook.
When the giant leader of the
Philistines, protected from head to foot with armor, armed with mighty
weapons, and preceded
by his shield bearer, saw the unarmed and unprotected
Israelite youth approaching, he was angry at being so insulted, and
said to him, “Come to me and I will give thy flesh
unto the fowls of the air, and to the beasts of the field.”
The undaunted youth answered: “Thou
comest to me with a sword and with a spear, and with a shield; but I
come to thee in the
name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of
Israel whom thou hast defied. This day will the Lord deliver thee into
mine hand.”
David did not, like the Philistine,
put his faith in armor, in sword, or in shield, but in the Almighty; and
by faith he conquered
his mighty foe. Putting a single stone in his sling he
buried it in the forehead of the giant, who fell prostrate to the
ground.
Faith is the very pith and marrow of
achievement. No faith, no achievement. All-absorbing faith, great
achievement. Show me
a great achiever and I will show you a man of great
faith, faith in himself, in his ability to achieve his aim. Faith has
ever been the miracle worker of the ages. It is the
connecting link between God and man; it is man’s strength, the
cornerstone
of all his building, all his achieving.
The trouble with those of us who are
not doing what we can and ought to do is that we lack faith. We do not
believe that we
can go into the great within of us and simply and
naturally make connection with divine force, with the all-supply, with
the
Power that made us, that Power which has created and
which upholds the universe and from which we derive our strength.
We make this connection through
faith. This is our trolley pole, and if we could only put it up until it
taps the wire which
carries omnipotent power we should feel the thrill of
divine life, of inexhaustible strength surging through us.
If you do not make this connection;
if you lack the divine self-confidence born of faith in Omnipotence, you
will never be
what you long to be. Your prayers will come back to
you unanswered; your efforts will bear no fruit; your negative attitude
will make it impossible for you to achieve your
object.
A negative, doubting mind, a mind
saturated with fear of failure can no more accomplish, create, or
produce, anything of value
than a stone can violate the law of gravitation by
flying up in the air. The Creator does not change the law of gravitation
because a man walks off the roof of a house, even
though he may do it unconsciously, in his sleep. The creative principle,
the law of achievement, does not vary any more than
the law of gravitation, and you will achieve what you desire, be what
you long to be, only when you obey the law. The
Creator himself can not fulfill your desire in any other way, any more
than
He can make the sun, contrary to law, turn from its
course in the heavens, any more than He could make the world turn about
and go in the opposite direction around the sun, when
the heavenly bodies are pulling it the other way.
There is all the difference in the
world between the power of the person who believes in his destiny, who
has unquestioned
faith in his mission, who believes that he is a part
of the divine plan, that he is in the current which runs Godward, and
the one who does not have this faith. The one is
equipped for a victorious life; the other is headed toward defeat.
It is always the men and the women
with a stupendous faith, a colossal self-confidence, that do the great
deeds, accomplish
the “impossible.” Those who do not take much stock in
themselves, who have only a sort of milk-and-water purpose, who do not
believe that they were intended to do anything in
particular, never have been and never will be the doers of the world.
I have before me a letter from a
young woman, who says she never expects to amount to anything or to
accomplish much of anything.
“I have always been unlucky, a blunderer,” she writes.
“I am always making mistakes, and nearly always fail in whatever I
undertake to do. I never have had any confidence in
myself, and I fear I never will.”
Now, the reason why this girl fails
to accomplish anything is very clear. Her mental attitude is the main
cause of her trouble.
No one can succeed with such a mental attitude as
hers, for achievement is first mental. It begins in the mind.
There is no philosophy, no power in the universe that can help me to do a thing when I think I can’t do it.
More people make wrecks of their
lives from lack of faith in themselves than from any other cause. There
is only now and then
a man who really believes in his own bigness, who has
sufficient faith to back up his ability. And ability must be backed
up by a superb self-confidence before it can
accomplish anything. The ability of a Napoleon or a Webster would be
absolutely
powerless without self-confidence.
Before we can win out in life we must
believe in our power to win. We must be confident in our expectations
of success, vigorous
in our self-faith. We must believe in ourselves and
the thing we are doing without reserve, with all our hearts.
When Jane Addams left college she was
in such poor health that physicians told her she could not live more
than six months.
“All right,” she said, “I will take that six months to
get as near as I can to the one thing I want to do for humanity.”
Can any one doubt that Miss Addams’
restoration to health and the great work she has accomplished for
humanity in founding
and conducting Hull House, with its many beneficent
activities, in the long years since the physicians gave her only six
months
more of life, are due to her deep faith in God and the
divine power within herself?
The Centurion said to Christ: “Speak
the word only and my servant shall be healed.” And when he returned home
he found his
servant healed. When he asked at what hour he had
begun to improve they told him it was at the seventh hour—the very hour
at which he had talked with the Christ. The
Centurion’s was the faith that makes miracles possible.
Lack of faith is the supreme cause of
failure. How can any one accomplish anything worthwhile when one’s very
executive power
is paralyzed, disheartened, discouraged by the
thought, amounting almost to a certainty, of failure? It would be to
overcome
or to set aside the working of the law of cause and
effect. Your achievement will never rise above your faith. That is the
high-water mark of your attainment.
I have seen a man of ordinary
strength who was hypnotized, stretched between two chairs, with his
heels resting on one chair
and his head on another, holding up six or eight men
on that part of his body which lay between the chairs. This man
supported
a horse in the same way. Now, where did this
extraordinary increase of power come from? It only lasted while the
hypnotist
made his subject believe that he could support the men
and the horse. The moment the hypnotist shook the man’s confidence
in himself, shattered his faith that he could bear up
the enormous weight laid on him, the man dropped to the floor. And when
the hypnotist made him believe that he could not bear
up a single man, he could not do it. In fact, under this influence of
hypnotic suggestion he could not even support his own
body.
We never can get farther than our
faith in ourselves. We cannot do anything bigger than we think we can.
We are hemmed in
by our opinion of ourselves, and until we enter that
larger atmosphere of faith where we shall find the belief that we can
do the thing we were made to do beating within us, we
cannot do it.
A hypnotist could make a Webster, or a
Shakespeare, believe he was a fool. He could make a Sandow believe that
he could not
lift a chair, and the man, strong as he is, couldn’t
do so simple a thing as this until his faith and self-confidence were
restored.
Now the power which enables a man to
obey the command or suggestion of a hypnotist to do things easily which
in his conscious
state would be impossible does not come from the
hypnotist. It was in the subject himself all the time. The hypnotist
merely
aroused him, made the man believe he could do the
thing suggested, and he did it.
Muscles that are trained to lift and
support enormous weights receive the most of their power from the mind
of the athlete.
The same muscles, if separated from the mind that
controls them, if taken from the man’s body, could not support a tenth
part
of the weight without breaking.
Experiments have shown that the
deltoid muscle, taken immediately from an athlete’s arm at the moment of
an accidental death,
would sustain only about fifty pounds of weight before
it would break, while just before the man’s death this same muscle
would have supported hundreds of pounds. This great
difference had a mental cause. It was the athlete’s self-confidence that
added all the extra power. As a matter of fact a man
could not hold up his hand if he did not believe he could do so, if he
had not confidence that he had the strength to do it.
The size of our faith indicates the
size of the cable which connects us with our Maker. If this faith cable,
which carries
the omnipotent current, is small we get but a little
of the force from the mighty current that runs heavenward.
If our faith were large enough we should be larger men and women, and we should travel Godward infinitely faster than we do.
One reason why many people do not
amount to more than they do is that they seem to look upon their life
dream, their ambition
as a sort of fanciful mental picture, something that
has no definite basis in reality. These people never take their life
mission very seriously, and consequently never grow to
their full stature. They do not seem to grasp the unity of God’s plan,
or to realize that they were meant to play definite
and distinct individual parts in it. Yet that is just what we are here
to do. We were not thrown off as independent,
unrelated units of the universe. There is still just as vital a
connection between
ourselves and our Maker as there is between the branch
and the vine. We are a projection of His mind, a definite part of His
plan, and our ambitions, our longings, are in a way a
reflection of the universal plan. Those who have faith in themselves
feel that their ambitions are evidences of ability to
back them by accomplishment, to make their dreams realities.
Abraham Lincoln was a very modest,
unassuming man, but when the first rumblings of the Civil War
reverberated through the
North and a presidential election was near at hand,
the Spirit moved him to put himself forward as leader of the nation.
When
the politicians were looking round for a suitable man
for that great position, Lincoln asked them why they did not nominate
him. He said he felt within his breast the power to
carry the nation through the threatened crisis, and that he believed he
would be elected. Coming from a less modest man this
assurance would look like a boast, but Lincoln’s motives were pure, and
his faith, based upon a marvelous fitness for the work
to be done, carried him to success.
The history makers have ever had
overmastering convictions in regard to their life work. They have
believed in their vision
and the part they were to play. They have believed
that their ambition foreshadowed a prophecy; that it was the substance
of things expected, and not a mere figment of the
imagination. In other words, men who have won out in the world have been
profound believers in their destiny.
The faith of such men impresses us
with a conviction of their power. We all feel that there is something
about the man who
believes in his destiny that commands our respect, our
homage. The world itself makes way for the man who believes he was
born to play a grand part in the human drama. The
world makes way for such a man or such a woman as it made way for the
peasant
maid of Orleans.
Practically all of Joan of Arc’s
miraculous power over the French army was due to her conviction of a
divine call to free
her country from its enemies. But for this conviction
she would have carried no more weight than an ordinary soldier. Indeed,
but for her faith in the divine call she never would
have reached Charles the Dauphin, never obtained his consent to take
the chief command of his army. She got her commission
from him “by taking the positive stand that she was the one person who
could save France—that she had the consummate courage
of a whole army in herself— that she knew beyond doubt that the army
under her leadership would be victorious.”
From the time when, a little girl
tending her father’s sheep, she first heard the call in her soul her
faith was unshakable.
What good did it do for Joan’s father to threaten to
drown his daughter if she persisted in her silly dreams that she was
to liberate France? What effect had ridicule,
especially the coarse ridicule of her sex by the soldiers, on her
deep-rooted
conviction? Was there ever anything more foolish than
that a simple peasant maid who tended sheep on a farm, and who had never
been away from home, or had the slightest military
training or knowledge of war tactics, could lead a defeated army to
victory?
How did she treat all such questioning, ridicule,
abuse and contempt? Her supreme faith ameliorated them all. They left
her
absolutely unmoved.
By faith alone the simple maid
performed one of the greatest miracles of history. No human being even
with the mental power
of a Napoleon, without a superb military training,
could have performed the miracle which this uneducated, untrained
peasant
girl performed.
What good did it do for the wise men
of Italy and Spain to laugh at Columbus, and to picture at their meeting
in court, men
standing on their heads, and everything, including his
ships, falling off the edge of the earth if it were round, and
revolved,
as Columbus claimed? The more these men laughed at
him, the stronger grew his faith in his mission, and the more determined
he became to prove the truth of his claim. And the
mutinous crew of Columbus, after many weary weeks’ wandering on an
apparently
limitless ocean, met with the same immovable faith,
the same stubborn resolution, when they threatened to put their leader
in chains. Day after day on this memorable voyage we
find this entry in his log book, “This day we sailed west because it
was our course.”
What hardship, what persecution, what
ridicule, or contempt, what denunciation even of those who knew him
best could have
induced such a man to give up his voyage of discovery?
Although no geographer had ever referred to any land on the other side
of the globe, and no scientist had hinted at such a
thing, nothing could turn Columbus from his purpose because there was
that something in him which looked beyond insuperable
obstacles, beyond every objection, and saw land beyond the seas. It
was this faith born in the divine within of him, this
faith back of the flesh but not of it, which sustained him in all his
trials, both before and after his great discovery.
The men who have left their mark on
the world have had a faith which nothing could shake. Not the direst
poverty, the most
inhospitable treatment, not cruelty, not ridicule
could separate them from their belief in their mission and their resolve
to carry it out.
When a man’s faith in himself and in
his mission is the dominant note in his life, nothing can daunt him, no
power can keep
him from his own. Think of the faith which Peary
exhibited before he discovered the North Pole! Time and time again he
tried
to find it, risking life and all his resources in the
search. The loss of his ship, the loss of his men, and his own scores
of hair-breadth escapes did not daunt him, could not
shake his faith. The North Pole was written in Peary’s heart. He must
discover it. Nothing could turn him from his object.
Many a time his friends pleaded with the explorer not to risk his life
again, but to no purpose. “To the North Pole” was the
slogan which haunted him day and night until at last he found it.
Faith is the force that moves
mountains, that has ever performed the miracles of civilization. What
incredible things, “impossible”
things, have been done in the world’s history by souls
aroused to a sense of their own power! Who can ever estimate what the
mental attitude of self-confidence has accomplished!
Who can figure what the world has lost from the inaction or the failure
of people with splendid ability, men and women who had
no faith in themselves, who were so filled with doubt of their own
power that their initiative was discouraged and their
creative ability killed!
There are thousands of people in very
ordinary positions today, who are not only capable of filling much
higher ones, but
who would actually be advanced if they only had
sufficient faith in themselves to branch out and compete for the
superior
place. There are men in all sorts of inferior
positions who, in many instances, are abler than the managers and
superintendents
over them, but who do not know their strength, because
they have never tested it.
Not long ago a friend of mine, a
comparatively young man, was unexpectedly called to fill temporarily a
position much above
his own, which had suddenly become vacant. So well,
however, did he fulfill the duties of the higher place that he was
complimented
by his employers and retained in the position.
This man had been working for a small
salary for years, and said that he had never dreamed of being advanced
so suddenly.
In fact, he had begun to have a feeling that he did
not amount to much, that he was a kind of failure anyway. He knew he had
ability in certain directions, hut he did not dare to
start or to go ahead with anything. All these years his lack of
confidence
in himself had acted upon his great ability like an
anchor to a balloon. But when he found that he was really capable of
assuming
a great responsibility; when level-headed business men
showed their belief in him by entrusting him with the handling of a
large business, his power was trebled. His awakened
faith in himself made a man of him. He began to think he amounted to
something;
that he was somebody after all, and thereafter he
advanced by leaps and bounds.
It makes a tremendous difference how
you approach your life work, whether you come to it with a superb faith
in yourself,
an unshakable belief in the Power that sustains you,
and a firm determination to make a triumphant success of it, or whether
you come to it with a faint heart, a doubting,
wavering mind, and weak endeavor.
The timid, fearful, questioning,
“What if I should fail?” attitude has ruined more careers than anything
else. On the other
hand, there is everything in holding the courageous,
self-confident thought. We fail only when we have lost our grip on
ourselves,
lost our faith in our ability to succeed. We could all
do infinitely more than we have done, or are doing, if we only had
enough faith in ourselves to undertake what we long to
do. New strength comes to the man or woman who dares to begin.
It is through faith we touch the very
source of life. It is the key which unlocks the door to power. Faith
opens the door
to the great within, where principle dwells, where
strength is generated. If we could measure a man’s faith we could come
very near to predicating accurately the measure of his
success in life.
It is not what other people say of
you, but something you feel, inside of you, that you are capable of
doing. This is your
pattern, your model. Your true model is the one you
see when you are the most optimistic, and not the mean diminutive figure
of yourself which you see when you have on your
pessimistic spectacles.
“Nothing in life is more remarkable
than the unnecessary anxiety which we endure and generally occasion
ourselves,” said Benjamin
Disraeli, a man who had attained the lofty position of
Prime Minister of England, in spite of difficulties that would have
completely vanquished a timid, unbelieving, worrying
soul. It was his unconquerable faith in himself that raised the once
despised Jew to the proudest place in England—next to
Queen Victoria, who honored him as a personal friend.
Disraeli, who was made Earl of
Beaconsfield by his queen, is a splendid example of the tremendous force
of the miracle-producing
power of self-faith, of the conviction that one is
born to do great things or to become a man of power and influence. Even
in the face of disappointment, failure, and ridicule,
the young Jew never lost faith in himself, never swerved in his purpose
to be the great political leader of England.
Whatever other weaknesses, defects or deficiencies successful men have had they have all had a powerful conviction of their
ability to perform the things they have undertaken.
One of the chief factors in Colonel
Roosevelt’s many-sided success has been his superb faith in Theodore
Roosevelt. Nothing
has ever undermined that faith. No abuse, no lying
about him, no criticism has ever shaken his belief in himself. Nothing
that has ever come his way has phased him, because he
has felt equal to any task thrust upon him.
Now, suppose Roosevelt had this one lack in his nature, the lack of confidence, of faith in himself, with the same ability,
the same opportunities, the same favoring environment he has had—what would have been the result?
He probably never would have been
heard from outside of his own country. His career has been built on
self-faith. He early
learned to believe in Roosevelt. He knew that he had
ability, and that by training and making the most of it he could do what
other people could do, what others had done, under
similar or far less favorable conditions. It is this superb self-faith
which has always characterized him, that has made him
so striking a figure in our national life. Had Mr. Roosevelt lacked
this one element, the effectiveness of his natural
ability, if not completely nullified, would in every respect have been
cut down tremendously.
Our flag says to the American people,
“I am what you have made me. I am just as great and no greater than you
believe me to
be. I stand for what you think I stand for. I cannot
rise above your estimate of me. What you think of me I am. I typify your
thought of me. If you put a high value upon human
liberty, upon democracy, upon human rights, then that is what I mean,
that
is what I typify. I am that which you think I am.”
The same thing is true of ourselves.
What we impress upon our subconscious self, our estimate of our ability,
our talent,
our initiative, is what we will express in life; is
what we will represent not only to ourselves, but to others. The sort
of picture other people carry of you in their mind is
pretty nearly the sort of man you believe yourself to be. And the sort
of picture others hold of you will react upon you to
strengthen your own mental picture, your own estimate of yourself,
whatever
it may be.
The world classifies men by their faith in themselves, in their mission in life, their faith in what they undertake to do.
The man who lacks faith in himself inspires no faith in others.
The psychology of faith is one of the
most interesting studies in human nature. Faith is the spiritual
faculty which runs
ahead, the courier which shows the way, the general
which encourages the men in the army; it is the commander who gets
wireless
messages from a higher source. Faith is the Napoleon
in the mental kingdom. All the other faculties are like the soldiers
in Napoleon’s army,—their power is multiplied many
times by their faith in their leader. They will follow faith to the
death,
but when faith wavers, when doubt takes the helm, it
is all up. There is no more fight. That means retreat. He can who thinks
he can, and he can’t who thinks he can’t. No one can
advance farther than his faith in himself and in his mission. Self-faith
leads in every great achievement. Even when others cry
“Impossible!” the man supported by faith persists, and achieves his
object.
Faith puts us in touch with infinite
power, opens the way to unbounded possibilities, limitless achievement.
Faith does not
think or guess; it knows, for it sees the way out. It
is the one thing that we can be sure will not mislead us. Our faith
is not a mere empty fancy; it is a positive substance,
a real creative force, a force which produces. St. Paul saw this great
force back of a powerful faith, when he said, “Faith
is the substance of things hoped for.”
Consider the marvelous power of St.
Paul’s faith! It gripped every fiber of his being. Every drop of blood
in him seemed to
tug away at his one unwavering aim—to convert the
world to Christianity. A similar thing is true of Martin Luther. What
power
or influence could have shaken Luther from his mighty
purpose? When he nailed his theses on the church door it was war to
the death if necessary.
Nothing has ever been so bitterly
assailed, so stubbornly fought against, so abused as the Christian
religion. No book was
ever published that the world has tried so hard to
blot out as the Bible, and yet no other book has anything like such a
sale
as the Bible. Even today the sales of “best sellers”
look small in comparison with the sale of this book which the world has
tried to destroy. And it is faith only that has
enabled this Christian philosophy to survive the frightful attacks made
upon
it.
It was by faith that the Christian
religion was established and that Christ’s teachings survived the
determination of the
great Roman Empire, then at the zenith of its power,
to crush them. Just picture the enormous disproportion between that
little
band of Christ and His followers and the great Roman
Empire, which was determined to destroy them! Yet that mighty empire
crumbled, while Christ’s teachings endure and the
religion He established spreads to every remotest corner of the earth!
Think of the first little company of
the early Christians, unarmed, unaided, pitted against the power of
ancient Rome. Persecuted,
thrown into the arena in the Coliseum, to be torn to
pieces by wild animals; dipped in tar and used as torches to light up
the lake in front of Nero’s palace, they suffered
without a murmur! What enabled these men and women to persist against
such
enormous odds? A mighty faith which no power on earth
could shake.
Think you the early Christian martyrs
could have gone serenely to the stake, and could have declared their
faith without a
sign of wavering, even when the flames were licking
the flesh from their bones, without that supreme faith which savored of
divinity?
Who could ever enumerate the miracles
which faith has wrought in human history? It was through faith that the
greatest discoveries
and inventions were made.
The sufferings, the sacrifices, the
years of painful, heartbreaking waiting, which hundreds of inventors had
to endure, are
beyond all human comprehension. Their superhuman
endurance was made possible simply because of their faith in their own
power
to achieve, their loyalty to a voice which spoke from
the great within of them, a voice which others could not understand
or appreciate.
It has always been just in proportion
to man’s loyalty to this voice, this faith which is the substance of
things hoped for,
the evidence of things not seen, the prophecy of
possible reality, that he has succeeded in accomplishing great things.
It
has ever been this supreme faith which has, little by
little, lifted the race from the Hottentot to the higher civilization
of today.
We do not understand the nature of
this marvelous faith at all. Those who have it in a remarkable degree
simply follow it.
They obey the voice as Joan of Arc obeyed her
“voices,” the God urge within them which always leads its follower to a
goal
which not only lifts him, but lifts the race with him
to greater heights.
Mankind has climbed to its present
height upon the steps of faith. But while there is only now and then one
who is willing
to follow the voice of his soul, the faith that calls
to him to advance, especially if it leads through trials and hardships
and all sorts of deprivations, that voice haunts us
all. There is some discovery, some invention, some possible improvement
for humanity prophesied in every human being. There is
not one of us that cannot do something toward lifting the race a little
higher, if we only obey the call of God!
The lack of self-confidence, of a
vigorous faith in one’s mission is a weak link in most lives. The most
difficult thing in
the world is to make human beings believe in their own
bigness, the grandeur of their mission, in the sublimity of their
possibilities;
and the greatest service that can be rendered a human
being is to help him to discover his possibilities, for this establishes
his faith, inspires him to pursue his ambition.
When a man gets a glimpse of the
enormous power locked up in his nature he will not doubt again. His
faith is established;
and he will never rest until he brings out the other
half of himself which is waiting to help him fight his battles and to
move on to higher planes of thought and life.
A soul-consuming faith has ever been
the power which has moved things in the world, which has built up all of
the great religions,
the new philosophies. It has been the fundamental
principle of all human development and of all great achievement.
Faith is emphasized more than almost
any other thing all the way through the Bible. It was by faith that
Abraham accomplished
his marvelous work; it was by faith that Moses led the
children of Israel through the Wilderness. All the prophets in the
Old Testament are constantly emphasizing the power of
faith; and Christ Himself, Paul and all the other great New and Old
Testament writers were constantly emphasizing the
miraculous power of faith to achieve, to accomplish.
How many times Christ said,
“According to thy faith be it unto thee.” Two words that He emphasized
more than all others were
faith and belief. These seemed to be magic words. They
carried a tremendous force, more powerful than electricity. The Savior
constantly reiterated the might of faith, the power of
belief. “Be not afraid, only believe.” “Be of good cheer; it is I,
be not afraid.”
“According to thy faith.” This is the burden of His message to His chosen twelve.
And how often He had to reprove them
for their lack of faith, their timidity, their fear, their unbelief!
Again and again
when they failed to accomplish that which He sent them
out to do, He reproached them: “Why are ye so fearful? How is it that
ye have no faith?”
He assured them that only on one
condition could they do the work He was training them to do—that they
have faith. Having
this, they should do even greater things than He was
doing. “Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that believeth on me, the
works that I do shall he do also; and greater works
than these shall he do; because I go unto my Father.”
“Heal the sick,” He urged, “cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils; freely ye have received, freely give.”
That something in human nature which, more than all else, reflects the divine in man, is faith. It is lack of it that causes
many of the ills, much of time unhappiness, and most, if not all, of the failures in life.
If you lack this self-faith which is
the sublime of man, if you are deficient in this great motor power which
accomplishes
things, which builds superb, masterful characters, you
can make good your lack; you can supply your deficiency by daily
auto-suggestive
treatment for the acquisition or the strengthening of
this greatest and most necessary of all human traits—faith. When giving
a self-treatment, always get by yourself, and talk to
yourself in a firm, decided tone of voice, just as if you were speaking
earnestly to some one else whom you wished to impress
with the great importance of what you were saying. Addressing yourself
by name, say:
“You are a child of God, and the
being He made was never intended for the sort of weak, negative life you
are leading. God
made you for success, not failure. He never made any
one to be a failure. You are perverting the great object of your
existence
by giving way to these miserable doubts of yourself,
of your ability to be what you desire with all your heart to be. You
should be ashamed to go about among your fellows with a
long, sad, dejected face, as though you were a misfit, as though there
were not enough force in you, as though you had not
the ability to do what the Creator sent you here to do. You were made
to express what you long to express. Why not do this;
why not stand and walk erect like a conqueror, instead of giving way
to discouragement and doubt and carrying yourself like
a failure? The image of your Creator is in you; you must bring it out
and exhibit it to the world. Don’t disgrace your Maker
by violating His image, by being everything but the magnificent success
He intended you to be.”
There is a tremendous achievement
force, an up building and strengthening power in self-assertion, in the
asserting of the
“I am.” This is not egotism, not the glorification of
the burlesque of the man or woman which wrong thinking or wrong living
has made. It is simply the assertion of your kinship
with the Father, a strong appeal in the first person to your other self,
the ideal self, the self you feel you were intended by
the Creator to be and which sometime, somewhere, you shall be.
But, remember, it is not enough to
believe in yourself when you feel particularly happy, or when some good
fortune has come
to you. It is not enough to have faith spasmodically,
to get enthusiastic over your prospects, and then undermine all your
previous efforts by admitting doubt, fear, and
discouragement to your mental kingdom. It won’t do to keep dropping down
again
and again, like a frog trying to get out of a well,
and feeling a little weaker and more discouraged after each fall.
Make it a habit to begin and end the
day with a declaration of faith in yourself, faith in your God. Guard
this faith continually
as your most precious capital. Take no chances that
this, your greatest life asset, shall be imperiled by weak, downhearted
thoughts.
All doubts and fears, all pessimism
and negative thinking poison the very source of life. They sap energy,
enthusiasm, ambition,
hope, and faith, everything that makes life strong,
vital, and creative. Entertain only the mental friends of your ambition,
those that will help you realize your ideal, that will
help you to make your dreams come true, to match your vision with
reality.
If you are grounded in faith, enemy
thoughts will have no power over you, because your positive, affirmative
mental attitude
will bar them from your mind. You will be strong
through the consciousness of the God within you, for “hereby we know
that
He abideth in us, by the Spirit which He hath given
us.” When a man realizes his kinship with the great creative Power, that
he is in truth a son of God, he cannot be other than
positive, forceful, radiant, self-reliant, a conqueror of that which
would drag him back or hold him down. All the forces
in the universe combine to help him to his goal.
The faith that we are God’s children, gods in the making; the faith that we are a vital part of the great creative force of
the universe; that we are a living part of the eternal God Himself will transform our lives.
Faith And Drugs
“I am the Lord thy God that healeth thee.”
“I dress the wound, but God heals it.”—Written by Ambrose Pare on the walls of the School of Medicine in Paris.
The potencies in the drug-stores are
weaklings in comparison with the mighty life-giving, life-inspiring
potencies which live
in the great within of ourselves. It is here we make
connection with the vital, creative, restorative power which first
created
us, and which re-creates us, restores, repairs, and
heals us.
To nothing else touching his life can the aphorism “As a man thinketh in his heart so is he” be more fittingly applied than
to a man’s health.
Health can be established only by
thinking health, just as disease is established by thinking disease.
Just as you must think
success, expect it, visualize it, make your mind a
huge success magnet to attract it if you are to attain it, so if you
want
to be healthy, you must think health, you must expect
it, you must visualize it, you must attract it by making your mind a
huge health magnet to attract more health, abundant
health. As long as physical defects, weaknesses, or diseased conditions
exist in the imagination, as long as the mind is
filled with visions of ill health the body must correspond, because our
bodies
are but an extension of our thoughts, our minds
objectified.
Health is based upon the ideal of the
body’s perfection and the absolute denial of disease, the denial of
everything but the
ideal condition; upon the idea that only that which is
good for us can be real in the highest sense of the word; that all
physical discords are only the absence of harmony, not
the reality of our being, the truth of us. Health is the everlasting
reality; disease is the absence of reality. It is only
seeming.
In proportion to the Physician’s
ability to suggest perfect soundness of body to his patient, to
visualize him as physically
perfect; in proportion to his power to see and to
impress upon the mind of his patient the image of the ideal, instead of
that of the diseased, discordant, suffering
individual, will he be able to help him.
In 1866 Sir James Paget, who was then
the most famous physician in England, in speaking of a case which had
baffled him for
a long time, told another physician that some day his
patient would disgrace the profession “by being juggled out of her
malady
by some bold quack, who by mere force of assertion
will give her the will to heal or forget or suppress all the turbulences
of her marvelous system.”
Many physicians admit that “quacks”
often heal patients when the regular physicians can do nothing for them.
But they do not
realize the principle underneath this sort of healing
by the “quacks,” as they call them; that is, the power of assertion,
the establishing in the mind of the patient the idea
of his health, the wholeness of his body.
Whether we call him a quack, a
healer, or a regular physician, he will help his patient best by acting
on this principle,
because the creative forces in the patient will all
the time be building into the tissue of his body the reality of the
perfect
image, the image of the sound, robust being which the
physician projects into his mind.
A great surgeon has told me that time
and again he has performed make-believe surgical operations upon
patients who had dwelt
so long on the probability of disease in certain
organs that they had become obsessed with fear and developed some of the
symptoms of the disease.
In such cases as this the surgeon
goes through all the forms of a regular operation. He puts the patient
on the operating
table, puts him under an anesthetic, and will
sometimes scratch the skin so as to leave a little semblance of a trace
of an
operation. Then he will put a surgical bandage on the
part and keep the patient in bed the usual time, at the end of which
he is quite well again and perfectly normal.
Without exception, he says, all the
patients he has treated in this way, whether for appendicitis or trouble
in some other
organ, have been entirely cured of their obsession.
Even in cases where the patient had insisted that he had had persistent
pain for many months have entire cures been made by a
make-believe operation.
Nor has this surgeon ever told his patients of the deception he practiced, which he claims was perfectly justifiable, because
his great object was to help them get well with the least possible risk or harm.
Another surgeon in a large hospital
says he has performed many such mock operations on hysterical women, who
imagined they
had some malignant growth or other cause for
operation, after all other efforts to convince them that there was
really nothing
the matter with them had failed.
Among other cases be cured in this
way was that of a woman who was convinced she had an internal tumor. She
had been operated
upon four times previously and had a tumor removed.
Having received a severe shock from upsetting a lighted lamp, she became
hysterical, and possessed with the illusion that she
was again suffering from tumors and that the only thing that would save
her life was an operation. Not being able to pacify
her in any other way, the physician decided to perform a mock operation.
The patient was put on the operating
table and given just enough anesthetic to put her in a state of
semi-consciousness. She
could bear and feel, but could not see. The surgeons
and nurses moved about the room quietly, gave hurried orders to the
attendants,
and acted as though they were working on a grave
operation. They let ice water drip from a considerable height upon the
affected
part for four or five minutes to give the patient the
idea of being swathed in bandages. Later, she was taken home in an
ambulance,
and on awaking found two trained nurses creeping about
her room. When asked if she could take a little sip of weak tea, she
told the nurse that she felt frightfully weak and
languid. But on being urged to make an effort, she succeeded in
swallowing
a little of the tea. The patient remained in bed ten
days, after which her friends were allowed to see her and she gradually
recovered strength.
Although there was no cutting
whatever by the surgeon’s knife, no real operation, this woman believed
there had been, and
the conviction of the relief it had afforded
neutralized or destroyed the previous conviction that she was in a
dangerous
condition, and that nothing but an operation could
possibly save her life.
A still more interesting case
reported by the same surgeon was that of a young woman who kept moving
her head from side to
side constantly, telling her physician that there was a
string in her head, pulling it this way and that. He could not persuade
her that this was only a delusion, and finally sent
her to a surgeon.
The surgeon decided to pretend to
operate upon her, and when he told her that an operation was necessary,
she clapped her
hands for joy. She told him that other physicians and
surgeons she had consulted only laughed at her and called her foolish
while all the time she knew there was a string in her
head and that she must be operated upon for its removal. The surgeon
put her under an anesthetic, cut off some of her
beautiful brown hair, and made a small skin incision, so she would think
that the operation had been performed.
Then he took a section from an E
string of a violin, soaked it until it looked like a cord or tissue, and
when the patient
recovered consciousness showed her this cord, saying
he had removed it from her head, and that the operation was very
successful.
The girl immediately recovered. Nothing else could
have convinced her, the surgeon said, that her head was not pulled
constantly
this way and that by a string, and she could get no
relief until she believed that the string had been removed.
Now this make-believe surgical
treatment is based on the same principle as the bread pill treatment,
which has affected so
many cures. It is wholly mental, and the cure is a
matter of faith on the part of the patient, his belief in the efficacy
of the remedy.
We all know that the benefits
received from physicians and medicines or drugs depend upon faith, the
patient’s expectancy
of relief, his belief that he is going to be cured.
Destroy this faith and you kill the virtue of the remedy. Physicians
well
know that when a sick man’s faith and hope are gone
there is very little chance for his recovery. This is why they refrain
as long as possible from telling a patient that there
is no chance for him, because they know that this affects him as the
death sentence affects a condemned criminal. It takes
away hope, and thus destroys the only rallying force which can possibly
tide the patient over a crisis. Every physician knows
that courage, hope and expectation of a cure are powerful aids to
healing.
He counts upon these to supplement his specific
treatment.
Expectancy of relief is literally of
itself a powerful remedy. I have in mind the case of a man who had been
suffering for
years with a peculiar disease which no hospital
treatment seemed able to reach. His hope of recovery was beginning to
weaken
when he heard of a foreign physician visiting this
country who had built up a great reputation in the successful treatment
of cases like his own. He read over and over in
medical journals and newspapers of the marvelous cures affected by this
physician
until he had worked himself up into a perfect frenzy
of belief that he also would be cured if he could only be treated by
this wonder worker. Although comparatively poor, the
cost meant nothing to him if he could only get relief from the torture
he suffered. So great was his confidence that he was
going to get relief that he mortgaged his home for every dollar he could
get, and sold nearly everything else he had in the
world in order to go to this great specialist.
When he reached the town where the
specialist was he was obliged to remain some little time before he could
meet him. But
so profound was the man’s faith in him that he was
practically cured before he saw him or began to take his treatment.
After
an examination the specialist told him he was sure to
get well, and even before the man had his prescription filled he felt
complete relief from his trouble.
Just think of the tremendous
psychological advantage in this case. The patient’s mind was in perfect
condition for receiving
help from the doctor’s treatment. He didn’t have a
doubt but that he was going to be cured, and he was cured—by his faith.
Many people have undoubtedly been
cured of disease by their great faith in some worthless patent medicine.
For a long time,
perhaps, they believed that if they could only get
that particular remedy they would be cured. Their expectancy was so
great,
their hope so large, and their faith so powerful, that
when they realized the conditions which they believed would make them
well they got the benefit of their optimistic thought.
For example, I know a very poor man
who suffered tortures for many years with rheumatism. His joints and
many parts of his
body were so fearfully swollen that he was not only
badly disfigured, but actually crippled. He had used all sorts of cheap
remedies recommended by friends, but without any great
hope or expectation of relief. But one day he read a very graphic
account
of the near-miracles which had been performed by some
all-powerful patent remedy for rheumatism. It was quite expensive;
however,
something like two dollars a bottle, and two dollars
was a small fortune to this poor man who could not work. There was no
one to help him out but his wife, who earned their
support by taking in washing, going out cleaning occasionally and
picking
up a little money in any way she could earn it. By
dint of extra hard work she managed to save the price of a bottle of the
wonderful remedy. For months the man had been dreaming
about what it would do for him. He pictured himself as growing stronger
and better after every spoonful from the precious
bottle. When at last his wife succeeded in getting the medicine for him,
it had precisely the effect he had pictured. What he
expected, what he had anticipated, actually happened. Just think of a
dead, inert drug which couldn’t move itself even in a
thousand years moving man, the mightiest power in the universe!
The virtue is not in the inert drug.
The curative quality comes from the person’s faith in it. Destroy faith
in it and you
destroy the virtue of the remedy. There must be faith
in the physician or the sick person will get no benefit from his
treatment.
Faith must accompany the drug, the prescription, or it
will be powerless and the cure will be in proportion to the faith.
If the patient’s mind is prejudiced in the very least
against the physician, or if he fights against the remedy, this will
counteract the influence that otherwise might be
beneficial. The diseased cells in any part of the body can only be
repaired
by the creative energy, the life force in the cells
themselves, and this must be stimulated by hope, faith, and expectancy
of relief. It is powerfully reinforced by faith in a
certain physician or a certain remedy.
We have proof of this in the fact
that the same remedy may have a wonderful curative effect upon one
patient who possesses
great faith in the physician and the remedy, while the
same thing will have no effect whatever upon another lacking faith
but having a similar constitution and temperament, and
suffering from exactly the same malady. In other words, under exactly
the same circumstances, the same remedy will have a
powerful affect when animated by faith while it will have no affect
whatever
without faith.
While there is no denying the fact
that the majority of people fill their medicine closets with all sorts
of concoctions that
work havoc in mind and body, it would be suicidal to
condemn entirely the practice of medicine and the use of drugs and other
physical remedies as long as the vast mass of the
people believe in them, because their faith will help them. If the fixed
belief of the race is that certain remedies will cure
certain diseases, corresponding results will temporarily follow their
use, for the body conforms to our faiths, our beliefs.
But look back over medical history and see what ridiculous remedies
the race has believed in. They had their day and
perhaps served their purpose, but because the progress of the world has
taken
us far away from them, how superstitious and absurd
they seem to us today.
It is not so long ago since thousands
of men carried horse-chestnuts in their pockets, or wore iron rings to
rid themselves
of rheumatism. There have been hundreds of remedies
for rheumatism, each one of which had its vogue and then passed away.
The horse-chestnut and the iron ring enjoyed great
popularity in their day and furnished relief to many rheumatic
sufferers.
Thousands of such devices which were once standard
remedies for certain diseases seem ridiculous today even to the most
ignorant.
But when the faith of the people was fixed upon the
idea that the particular charm carried on the person, or the inert drug
put into the living organism, would re-create a
diseased cell, or restore lost tissue, certain advantages naturally
followed
their faith.
The history of medicine is largely a
history of the rise and decline of people’s faith in different remedies.
Tens of thousands
of such remedies which have been used with good
results in medical practice in the past are now obsolete because the
faith
of the physicians, the faith of the public have gone
out of them. They were effective while people’s faith in them continued,
but when the faith they had inspired evaporated their
virtue also evaporated. Everything depended upon the reputation of the
remedy, upon the belief in its power.
A similar thing is true of popular
physicians. Sick people want one of great reputation, one in whom
everybody believes, and
it is almost a universal experience that patients feel
much better after the visit of such a physician, even before he has
written a prescription or they have taken any of the
medicine he advises. And every physician knows how common it is for
ignorant
patients to feel very much better just after taking a
dose of prescribed medicine, long before it could possibly have gotten
into the circulation or physically affected them.
Physicians really owe their success largely to people’s faith in them
and
their remedies.
Faith is at the bottom of all cures, at the bottom of all achievements, physical or mental.
Religious history is full of examples of people who have been cured of all sorts of diseases by going to famed miraculous
springs, by bathing in sacred waters, or streams supposed to have great curative qualities.
A friend of mine when traveling in
India went to the Ganges during a great pilgrimage, when multitudes of
believers had gathered
on the banks of the sacred river to bathe in its
healing waters. He saw tens of thousands of these people, afflicted with
different diseases and some with open sores, bathing
at one time, and so close together that they could scarcely move. The
water was absolutely filthy, and dead bodies were
floating about in it, close to the bathers, and the bathers were
actually
drinking the sacred water!
Many of these poor wretches had come
long distances on their hands and knees, from which the skin was worn
off. They had looked
forward so long to bathing in these sacred waters, had
undergone such terrible sufferings and privation in order to reach
them that they had built up a tremendous faith in
their efficacy. So profound was their belief in their healing power that
a great many of them were actually cured by the very
waters which carried in them the germs of disease and death. Those
waters
which would have killed people who lacked faith in
their virtue cured many of these poor ignorant, deluded pilgrims.
Our great watering-places, famous health resorts, and healing springs all have a similar history. The faith of the sufferers
in all such instances works the apparent miracles.
I have witnessed the healing of
numbers of sick people at the church of St. Jean Baptiste, in New York,
at the annual novena
of St. Anne. Here the agency which wrought the miracle
was supposed to be part of the wrist-bone of St. Anne. This relic was
brought from a Canadian church in 1892, and every year
since a novena in honor of St. Anne, which lasts for nine days, is
celebrated at the church of St. Jean Baptiste. Throngs
attend this novena, to receive the healing touch of the sacred bone,
which is encased in silver and glass. All along the
altar rails, inside of which is the shrine of St. Anne, people crowd
together
kneeling, while a priest, carrying the sacred relic,
passes along and touches with it the afflicted part of each one of the
faithful as indicated by the sufferer. This may be the
head, the arm, the hand, the eye, the ear, but, whatever the part,
the priest touches it quickly with the relic, at the
same time uttering appropriate prayers. Marvelous cures are seemingly
affected by contact with the relic, because this is
the climax of the victims’ faith.
It is well known that the
incantations of the savages, the ceremonies of the Indian medicine men,
and all of the many superstitious
rites practiced by various peoples, have resulted in
quite a large percentage of cures.
All of these things show that it is
not the superstition, it is not the ceremony, it is not the relic, it is
not the medicine,
it is not the sacred water, but the faith that does
the cure. This is the principle in all methods of healing, from those
practiced by the lowest savage tribes to the highest
civilization. The faith of the sufferer is the chief thing. Christ never
said my faith, but thy faith hath made thee whole.
Faith in the shrine, faith in the remedy, in the superstition, in the physician, in the surgeon; faith in the hospital, faith
in any and all methods of healing,—this is their potent virtue.
The Indian medicine man with all his
grotesque and ridiculous incantations cures perhaps quite as large a
percentage of diseases
as does the average physician. Vast multitudes of
people whom no medicine or material remedy could help have been cured at
the various shrines which they sought at tremendous
sacrifice to themselves, because of their profound faith, their absolute
conviction that in this way and in this way only,
could they be cured.
Faith is the sovereign remedy of the
race. Faith is the builder, the creator, the restorer of life. Without
faith we can do
nothing. The Christ Himself constantly reminded His
followers that without faith they could do nothing. Even He could do
nothing
for those who lacked faith. Does not the Bible tell us
that in His own country, “He did not many mighty works there because
of their unbelief”?
The benefit received by those who
appealed to Him was always in proportion to their faith. It was always
“According to thy
faith be it unto thee.” His words to the afflicted who
came to Him for relief were “Believe ye that I can do this?” And when
He had healed He claimed nothing for Himself, it was
always “Thy faith hath made thee whole.” In other words, He was always
trying to arouse the faith of the people, trying to
impress them with the tremendous power of faith, faith in God and in
themselves,
assuring them that faith, even as a grain of mustard
seed would enable them to do marvels.
Christ never once referred to His own
faith as to the quality which would enable Him to perform His supposed
miracles. It
was the faith of the people in His power to heal them
that He emphasized. And just think what Christ’s reputation for healing
meant to the simple people of Galilee, the reputation
of the Man who was performing such wonderful miracles—opening the eyes
of the blind, making the lame to walk, the dumb to
speak, the deaf to hear, curing the leper of his supposedly incurable
disease,
and even raising the dead to life! Think of what the
rumors of such mighty doings would mean to such simple folk! Why, their
faith in Him was unbounded.
Think of the mighty faith that moved
people to let the sick down through the roof of houses in order to get
them near this
marvelous character? Is it any wonder that their
diseases fled at His touch, nay, at His word? In view of all this does
it
seem strange, or unscientific that Christian
Scientists, Mental Scientists, Divine Scientists, and others, believing
in the
power of God working through man, should perform such
miracles of healing and of ability increasing by pure faith? And if
the curative qualities of the remedies used by
physicians are so largely due to faith in them, which physicians
themselves
acknowledge, why not leave out the drug and apply only
the healing faith? Why not depend wholly upon faith, as Christ did,
and as the mental healers do?
The homeopaths made one jump from
enormous doses to almost nothing, with apparently the same results. The
mental healers have
simply taken one more step. They are depending wholly
upon faith, and they seem to perform about as large a percentage of
cures as the regular medical profession. And, as a
rule, their cures are very much more permanent, because truth eradicates
the roots of the disease, which many physicians now
believe to be entirely mental.
Christ never once referred to any
other healing principle than faith. It was always faith, and this is the
principle on which
all mental healing is based. The success of the mental
healer depends upon his own faith and the faith which he is able to
arouse in the patient. If there is no faith there is
no cure. Some will say that many people are cured without faith, even
against their will; but the very fact that these
people seek treatment is proof that they do have faith or they wouldn’t
go
to the healer. Of course the healer’s faith has much
to do with healing, but a real permanent cure can only be affected
through
the faith of the sufferer.
The healing principle is in the
patient himself. The mental healer does not heal his patient. ‘He merely
arouses the divinity,
the healing principle in the sufferer. Whether it is
an allopath, a homeopath, or a mental healer who treats you when you
are sick, it is always the God force in you that
heals. It is the same force that created you and sustains you, the force
that comes to your rescue in all your troubles, that
same force which rushes to unite the broken bone, to heal the cut or
wound, to repair the crushed tissue, to make you whole
again. There is only one healing force and that is the creative force.
We hear a great deal about the
healing principle of the divine mind, but it is the divine mind in you,
and not outside of
you, it is the divine principle inherent in your
divine nature that does the healing. It is the creative principle which
is
everywhere in the great cosmic intelligence that heals
all your hurts and restores you to health. This is the same creative
principle which develops the germ in the acorn and
carries it up to the giant oak; that develops a tiny germ into a
beautiful
full blown rose. It is this creative principle which
is everywhere present in the universe, which inheres in every atom,
which
is, in fact, the reality of every atom in the
universe, for the reality of everything is God.
The reality of ourselves, the truth
of our being is God, otherwise we could not exist. It is no outside
power which comes
to our rescue, sustains us, holds us up, and guides
us. It is the creative God power within us. This creative power is
inherent
in every cell of your body, in every particle of
matter. This is the reality of us, the truth of our being. We literally
live
and move and have our being in God.
A realization of this truth, an
ever-increasing consciousness of our oneness with the Supreme Power will
bring ever-increasing
peace and serenity of mind and health of body. An
ever-increasing sense of our cosmic consciousness will increase our
mental
sense of well being, of security, of safety from all
that would injure us or destroy our happiness.
Someone has said that “to think of
the presence and power of God as a healing life force, is to come in
actual mental contact
with that presence. To continue this thought by sturdy
affirmation of healing truth will attune the mind to harmony with that
beneficent power, lifting it out of the darkness and
heaviness of mortal thinking into the brightness and joy that is the
result of thinking God’s thought after Him.”
We do not realize the power of
thought, because we do not appreciate the fact that we actually come in
contact with whatever
we think about or contemplate. This contact is no less
real because it is mental; and it has power to influence the body,
as well as the mind.
Never think of yourself as weak, diseased, sick, and deficient in any faculty, in any function. Think of yourself as perfect
and immortal and your mind and body will tend to respond to this demand for wholeness and completeness.
The images of unfortunate symptoms,
every sick or weak suggestion harbored in the mind are fatal to the
realization of the
ideal. Sick thoughts, weak, deficient thoughts, make a
weak, deficient body and a crippled mentality. Think wholeness, think
completeness regarding yourself. If you really believe
that you are made in your Maker’s image you cannot think too
magnificently
of yourself.
No matter how your body may seem to
contradict this ideal of yourself, persist in holding it, and the
weaknesses, the deficiencies
and the discords which hinder your progress will
gradually give way to the dominance of the divine image in you. The life
processes within you will build the outward
manifestation of this sublime image of yourself, and you will become
normal, Godlike.
Many people who do not understand the science of mental healing think it is affirming what we know to be untrue, to persist
that we are all right, when our bodies are racked with pain and we are really unable to work.
But when we say we are well, even though we are suffering pain, we mean that the reality of us is well, that the truth of
our being cannot be sick, cannot suffer, cannot know any discord, because that is divine.
You should always affirm the truth of
your being, not its untruth, its error. Affirming your spiritual ideal
always and everywhere
will help you to grow into His likeness, into the
likeness of perfection, while the contemplation of disease, the habit of
looking at it as a reality, of regarding it as a
truth, will tear down all of your physical building, will keep you
constantly
susceptible to disease.
You cannot build up a strong
resisting body when you are constantly thinking of disease,
concentrating on it, listening to
its affirmation. Deny everything that is wrong,
everything that is false, deny everything that is not God created and
you
will be all right.
But remember that merely denying is
not destroying. You must not, as many do, deny in such a way as to make a
stronger impression
upon your mind of the thing you wish to get rid of.
While denying the reality of sickness you must keep in mind the truth
of its opposite, the spiritual ideal, and the
spiritual man, which is never sick and never can be. Cling to the
perfection
ideal, the God ideal of yourself, no matter how loudly
the opposite may scream, how busy it may be in asserting itself. The
intelligence inherent in every cell in the body builds
according to the model presented to it, and there is everything in
holding up before the mind the perfect pattern, the
health pattern, the health ideal.
Holding the ideal of health in the
mind is the most scientific way of healing any physical discord or
disease in any of the
bodily organs, because the community cells themselves
in any organ through their collective intelligence are powerfully
influenced
by the messages which come from the central station of
the brain. These cells are very susceptible to encouragement or
discouragement.
They respond quickly to hope or despair, hence the
tragedy of treating the body with discouragement.
All forms of mental healing are based
upon suggestion of the divine ideal, and the healing is effective just
in proportion
as the mind of the sufferer is kept saturated, whether
by autosuggestion or by daily help of the healer’s mind, with the
divine
ideal, with the health principle of the divine mind.
The suggestion that health is the
everlasting fact, and that disease, sickness are counterfeits, the
absence of reality, is
a healing force. Whatever form the mental healing
process takes it is holding the ideal of wholeness, completeness, the
thought
that the sufferer is the child of divinity and that
his birthright is health and wholeness that does the work.
When I hold the ideal of perfect
health I do not picture or visualize the human side of myself. This may
be a mere apology
of the divine side of myself. I hold the ideal of the
divine self, the perfect self, that part of me which was never born
and which will never die, that part of me which was
never sick or diseased, and which will never suffer defeat or disaster.
This is the triumphant side of my life, the divine
side, and this is the ideal which I shall always cling to. I shall cling
to it because this is the pattern which I wish to
build into my life, and I know that by holding this divine pattern, tins
divine ideal in my mind it will be reproduced in my
body.
On the other hand, if I hold the
ideal which corresponds to the seemingly weak, defective or diseased
part of myself, this
inferior ideal will be built into my life, and all my
standards will correspond to my lower ideal. If I constantly think and
say to myself “I am physically weak, I have inherited
unfortunate disease tendencies from my ancestors, who died with
consumption,
with cancer, with stomach trouble, with liver trouble
or heart disease,” I shall tend to realize these conditions.
You can never establish health except
by thinking and affirming health principles. You must hold the health
ideal. You must
constantly and vigorously assert, “I am health; I am
vigor; I have a robust constitution; I am power; I am perfect
physically;
the Creator never handicapped me by passing along to
me the inherited weakness or disease tendency without putting in me a
force which is more than a match for it, without
giving me the ability to overcome my handicap. My health is based upon
the
consciousness of the truth of my being, the reality of
me, the divine of me. It is based upon what I have inherited from my
Maker; and this knows no disease, no weakness, no
sickness, no deterioration, and no death. What I have inherited from my
Maker is immortal, as He is immortal.”
The famous Dr. Richard C. Cabot, of
the Harvard Medical School says that the medical environment is most
unfavorable to a
patient’s recovery. Sick people, who are steeped in
the medical atmosphere, where they constantly hear the talk of disease
symptoms, find it very difficult to get away from the
sick thought. They are saturated with it when the mind ought to be
filled
with just the opposite. They should be in an
atmosphere where everything around them will suggest health, instead of
sickness
and disease.
Some people unconsciously keep the
body in a diseased condition by dwelling on disease. I recently heard of
a woman who had
been ill for a long time and who went to a mental
healer for advice. She said she wanted to tell him frankly that although
she had suffered a great deal, she didn’t know whether
or not it was God’s will that she should get well, and she didn’t know
whether it would be quite right for her to take the
chances of displeasing God by taking steps to get well!
Among other troubles, this woman had a
tumor on her neck, and she insisted that the healer should see how very
bad it was,
for she said he couldn’t possibly help her unless he
knew all about it, her symptoms and all the details concerning the
tumor.
She had dwelt upon her troubles and defects so long
that she was obsessed with them. She couldn’t see or think of anything
else.
When she came for her first treatment
the healer had ready a large vase of beautiful California roses, which
were about the
color of a natural, healthy pink skin. He told her to
sit down and look at them, to drink in beauty, and to think about their
perfection. To put her mind in a better condition to
receive a treatment he made her look at the roses for a half hour. He
told her that he didn’t want to hear anything about
her troubles, because a healer must see only the person God made, the
perfect, whole, complete being, with strong, robust
health, otherwise he could not help anyone. He instructed her to hold
the same thought; to hold in mind only the ideal which
her Creator had of her, not to think of any blemish, weakness or
disease.
The woman obeyed instructions, and under the influence of this dominant health thought, through the persistent holding of
the health ideal, her tumor gradually grew smaller, shriveled up and all her troubles disappeared.
Such healings support the fact that
the body is but objectified thought, and that when the thought is
changed the body also
must change. The habit of always thinking of
ourselves, of every faculty and function, as complete, whole, as
sublime, glorious,
would gradually revolutionize our lives.
The time is rapidly coming when
disease, sickness, will not be mentioned in the home; When all physical
defects and weaknesses
will be tabooed; when, instead of being saturated with
illness and disease thoughts, children’s lives will be permeated with
the health thought, the thought of wholeness, of
completeness, physical and mental vigor, beauty, grace; when joy,
gladness,
optimism will take the place of the old discouraged,
sickness and disease thought and conversation in the home.
In the future we shall live up to the
health ideal our Maker designed for us, because we shall hold the right
thought about
ourselves. Merely stopping our aches and pains and
curing disease is not enough. To be merely well is not achieving the
real
health ideal. The man that God planned was intended
for a very different quality of health.
It is the overflowing fountain, not
the one that is half full or just full, that makes the valley below
green and glad. It
is abounding health, health that is bubbling over,
superabundant energy that counts. This is the health that makes mere
living
a joy.
If you charge your whole nature with
the health ideal, if you think health, dream health, talk health; if you
believe that
you are going to be strong and healthy, because this
is your birthright, your very magnetism will be healing to others. You
will be a living illustration of the power of divine
mind over all sickness and disease.
How To Find Oneself
Few men find themselves before they die. -Ralph Waldo Emerson.
It’s that bigger, grander man beating beneath the dwarf of a man you feel yourself to be that is important.
There is a legend that when God was
equipping man for his long life-journey of exploration, the attendant
good angel was about
to add the gift of contentment and complete
satisfaction. The Creator stayed his hand—“No,” He said, “if you bestow
that upon
him you will rob him forever of all joy of
self-discovery.”
The greatest moment in any life is
the moment of self-discovery, the moment that gives a human being the
first illuminating
glimpse of his divine powers, that moment which opens
the door into the great within of himself and shows him his godlike
possibilities. The greatest event in any life is that
which arouses the God in him.
The principal of a New York evening high school, telling an interviewer how she had discovered herself, said:
“When I felt that there was need of
me in the world, I awoke to the fact that there must be a soul in me, a
something bigger
than I was, and therefore a something that I must give
to others. I have always believed in the school as a hitherto
unrecognized
field, because the world is a school, and the
application is therefore limitless.”
This teacher is remarkably successful
because she discovered early in life that something bigger than herself
which she felt
she “must give to others.” Although educated as a
society girl, the call from the within of herself to teach, was so loud
that it could not be resisted. Through teaching she
has not only found the larger woman in herself, but she is also helping
thousands of other women and girls to do the same for
themselves.
One of the most difficult things in
the world is to get people to realize the extent of their latent powers,
to believe in
their own bigness, in their own possibilities. The
reason is that they see only a part of themselves, because they have
only
partially discovered themselves.
“Each of us,” said Professor William
James, “has resources of which he does not dream.” If we could only turn
a spiritual
X-ray on ourselves most of us would find powers and
potencies in the great within of us which may not have gotten even to
their germinating stage. There is probably not a
living being who would not be amazed if he could see unfolded in
panorama
all of the potentialities within him, if he could only
glimpse the man he might be. He would say, “These remarkable success
qualities belong to someone who has achieved
distinction, not to an unknown person like me.”
All of the potencies and
possibilities of a giant oak are wrapped up in the acorn, and under the
right conditions they would
unfold to the full in a perfect oak. When we see a
scrub oak which has come from a perfect acorn, we know that it has been
dwarfed by wrong conditions, that only a very small
part of the possibilities infolded in the acorn were ever unfolded. The
mean little scrub oak expresses only a fraction of the
immense possibilities that lay buried in the parent acorn.
The same is true of every child born into the world. All of the latent forces, the powers and possibilities locked up in the
human acorn under right conditions, would develop to full and complete expression in the ideal man or woman.
And this is what Nature, in all her
work, is ever after, the ideal, the perfect specimen that reaches up to
the possibilities
foreshadowed in the seed. She is not after the dwarf
oak; nor does she want the shriveled, blighted wheat that has been
starved
and stunted by uncongenial soil, by droughts, or other
unfavorable conditions. It is the perfect wheat that was foreshadowed
in the parent kernel she wants. Above all, it is the
possible man, not the scrub oak or shriveled wheat variety of man that
Nature is ever after. ‘What you are is not a
thousandth part as important as the ideal man, the possible man existing
in the
life germ within you.
It is only now and then that we see a
giant human oak, where practically all of the possibilities of the
acorn have been unfolded
and given complete expression, as in a Socrates, a
Gladstone, a Lincoln. Most of us are human dwarfs, scrub-oak men and
women,
in whom only a minimum of the possibilities of the
human acorn have found expression. Yet I believe the time will come when
the average man will be larger than the most
magnificent specimens yet shown to the race.
What you are capable of being and
doing is your greatest life asset. What you are actually doing may be a
dwarfed thing compared
with the giant achievement you are capable of. It is
not what you have done, but what you long to do, what you feel capable
of doing that will, if you struggle to express your
ideal, count most.
Up to this time you may have been
seriously hampered or dwarfed in your development. All sorts of things
may have happened
to the possible man, or the possible woman in you, to
limit its growth, to restrict it, to impoverish it. But it is that
superb
thing that is possible to you, the thing which the
Creator sent you here to do that you must strive to express. It is the
man or the woman He wrapped up in the human acorn that
you should struggle to evolve. It’s that bigger, grander man beating
beneath the dwarf of a man you feel yourself to be
that is important.
In the great within of yourself there
may be vast powers which you have never called out. Who can tell what
unwritten books
that would inspire, or set the world thinking, may be
in your undiscovered reserves? Undeveloped beauty which would enchant
men may be locked up inside of you, waiting for
expression. What possible harmonies and melodies may be stifled, still
silent
in the octaves of your being! What masterfulness, what
vast reserves of helpfulness, inspiration, and encouragement may still
lie uncovered within you!
You doubt that there is anything of
the kind? But you do not know. Many a man has carried locked up within
himself for more
than half a century the germs of a mighty genius
without even guessing at it. There are multitudes of men and women all
over
the world who are as ignorant of their possibilities,
of their hidden success assets, as the Native American Indians were
of the resources of the great Western Continent when
Columbus discovered it.
Emerson says, “Few men find
themselves before they die.” Very few people ever make exploring voyages
within themselves, and
they carry with them to their graves undiscovered
contines of ability. The great majority die without developing their
possible
efficiency of hand, or tongue, or of brain; without
developing any of the special gifts locked up in the great within of
themselves.
Most of us die with the great secret, with the sealed
message which the Creator put in our hands at birth, still unread,
because
we have never learned how to open or how to read it.
Young men often say in excusing their
lukewarm efforts, “If I only knew that I had the ability of a
Roosevelt, an Elihu Root,
a Wanamaker or a Marshall Field that I could stand at
the head of my profession or business, there is no amount of hard work
or drudgery I would not undertake. No matter how many
years it might take, if I was sure of ultimate success, I would not
mind the work or the time.”
But how do you know, I ask? How can
you be sure that you have not a lot of this ability you long for locked
up in yourself?
If you have not tried your strength, how do you know
what you may be able to do? You may have more ability slumbering within
you than you dream of. Why waste your precious time
thinking about other people’s genius? Why not unlock your own, see what
you have, bring it out into the light and develop it?
You may have something of a Roosevelt, something of a Marshall Field
in yourself; you may have something very much greater
than either of these men manifested waiting your help to give it
expression.
When we know that even the great
majority of men whom we call successful use only a comparatively small
part of their ability
because they never find all of themselves, why should
any of us put a narrow limit to our possibilities, remain paupers in
achievement when we might be princes?
We set our own limitations. Emerson
hammers this truth home to all of us in his “Essay on Self-Reliance.” He
says: “That popular
fable of the sot who was picked up dead drunk in the
street, carried to the duke’s house, washed, dressed and laid in the
duke’s bed, and, on his waking, treated with all
obsequious ceremony like the duke, assured that he had been insane, owes
its popularity to the fact that it symbolizes so well
the state of man, who is in the world a sort of a sot, but now and then
wakes up, exercises his reason and finds himself a
true prince.”
There are enough powers, enough
resources in the minds of the people in the great failure army today to
revolutionize the
world if their sleeping potencies could be aroused; if
they could only be made to believe in themselves. If they could only
learn how to enter into the secret depths of their
nature, to get hold of themselves, to arouse latent qualities and
powers,
they could do marvelous things.
The great problem is to know how to
get at the force in the great within of ourselves and to put it to work
to the best advantage.
For whether life shall be a success or a failure
depends upon the call we make on our resources, the extent to which we
develop
all our possibilities.
The other day I was trying to
encourage a young man, who had the opportunity, to start out for
himself, instead of settling
down in a narrow groove to work for somebody else all
his life. “I am afraid,” he said, “I haven’t the courage to take
chances.
I have always worked for somebody else. I have never
made a program for myself; never started anything on my own
responsibility.
I don’t dare to make the attempt lest I fail.”
That young man will never get hold of
half of his resources, because he is afraid to trust himself, afraid to
branch out,
to take chances. We don’t know what we can do until we
try, and unused faculties never grow or strengthen. Everywhere we see
starved, stunted lives, people who have discovered but
little bits of themselves, little patches cleared up here and there
in the great wilderness of their possibilities. They
couldn’t believe in their inherent greatness. They couldn’t realize that
they were born into this world to do a certain work;
and that to do that work they would need every bit of power they could
develop.
The average youth starting out in
life has no means of knowing what his total assets are. Our systems of
education do not
help him to discover his possibilities. He sees only
the assets that lie on the surface, and if he is not instructed how to
find those that are deep down below the surface, if he
does not get into the right environment, if he does not make a call
on the divinity within him, he may never develop the
man it is possible for him to be.
Self-discovery is simply a question
of finding God in ourselves; and this is just what the new philosophy
helps us to do.
This new philosophy is a trolley pole which connects
us with the mighty current of infinite power, and then our life problems
seem easy because we are not pushing our car
ourselves. Infinite power does that.
Many people had never really met
themselves until they became acquainted with this new philosophy. That
is, they had never
up to that time found the best part of themselves.
They had previously been getting their living by their weak faculties
instead
of their strong ones. They had been in the position of
people living in poverty on a little corner of their vast estate,
ignorant
that there were great deposits of undiscovered,
unmined wealth.
The possibilities of mental expansion, enlargement of vision, quickening of the mental faculties, increasing the efficiency,—in
other words, the possibilities of self-discovery in the new philosophy are almost unbelievable.
In the old thought one’s ability is
pent-up, shut in. Self-expression is stifled; one is hemmed in by race
prejudices, race
beliefs, race lies, by religious convictions, whereas
in the new philosophy there is a freedom, a fullness of self-expression,
which gives a feeling that one’s latent powers are
being unlocked and set free.
I have known of a case of this sort
where a young man’s ability seemed to be doubled and quadrupled in a
very short time after
he got into the practice of this new philosophy.
Before that this young man said he was so hedged in by the old church
traditions
and prejudices, and by his great faith in drugs and
patent medicines, to which he had been a slave,—his whole mentality was
so blocked in and circumscribed, so narrowed, pinched,
stifled by his old thought, that he could not seem to get any freedom
of thought or expression.
This was due largely to the fact that
he had been reared in a small town in the South where religious
prejudice is very strong.
In this town people brought up in one denomination
believe that those in all the other denominations are doomed. This young
fellow used to pity everybody who was not a Baptist
because he felt sure that they were going to be damned forever. He had
himself a perfect horror of committing the
unpardonable sin, and he was filled with a slavish terror of death.
The new philosophy made him a
different being, turned him around and opened up a new world to him. The
things which had seemed
so real and so tremendously important in the past have
gradually faded into nothing, and he sees now that only the good is
real. He realizes that if God is all, if there is no
other power, if He made all that there is, everything must be good and
only the good can be real.
This one principle together with the
realization of the oneness of all life, the unity of all the things in
the universe,
has changed his outlook upon life, has unlocked his
fettered faculties and given him a freedom of expression which he had
never before dreamed possible.
We find ourselves in very different
ways. Struggling with difficulties, disappointments, failures, great
responsibilities,
has been the means of recalling many human beings to
themselves. “Returned with thanks,” abusive criticisms have opened the
door to fame to many an author, when if his first
manuscripts had been accepted, his first book praised, he might have
made
a very indifferent author.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox at the beginning
of her career sent out an article to nineteen different publishers
before it was accepted.
This has been the experience of many a great writer
who, in his effort to overcome obstacles has found his larger self.
The greatest of their latent
possibilities lies so deep in some natures that it takes the impact of a
tremendous emergency,
a great life, or national crisis to call it out. Any
ordinary event, the easy way of prosperity, will not do it; it must be
something which shakes them to the very center of
their being and knocks out from under them every support. They must feel
that they have nothing to lean upon but the creative
power within—even the God who made them. So long as there is no supreme
call made on the great within of them they never know
their own resources. On the other hand the structure of many a divine
success has risen out of the ashes of a burned fortune
or apparently ruined hopes.
The San Francisco earthquake and fire
was really the making of many lives. Thousands of men and women who had
not amounted
to anything before were suddenly brought to their
senses, and to the discovery of their real selves. The crash which made
such a terrifying rift in the earth for many miles,
made a rift in their lives, uncovering vast assets which otherwise never
would have been brought to light.
Like those plants which must be
crushed before they will reveal their sweetest fragrance, or their
beneficent properties,
many people never reveal the sweetest thing in them
until they are crushed by some great sorrow. They go through half a life
or more unconscious of the richness which lies buried
within them, when suddenly some great grief, some overwhelming
misfortune
reveals a wealth of personality, and of power which
not even those who knew them best dreamed they possessed.
Job really never discovered his full
power, his superb manhood, until he had lost all his material
possessions; until the
Bedouins had stolen his herds and burned his home, and
he himself had been attacked with boils and all sorts of physical
afflictions.
But out of these terrible afflictions which tested his
character came the light and strength which guided him to the haven
of peace, a greater material prosperity and a higher
manhood than before. It was only when overwhelming sorrows and losses
had stripped him of his supposed friends, his family,
and everything which he had thought worthwhile, and he was forced to
depend upon God alone, that he really found himself.
The shock of the Civil War which
uncovered the greater Abraham Lincoln also uncovered the greater Ulysses
S. Grant. When forty
years old nobody outside of his own little community
knew Grant. Up to that time he had not shown the slightest sign of what
was locked up in him. No one ever dreamed there was
anything remarkable in the man, and yet all of these years walking
around
unheeded among his fellows was one of the world’s
greatest warriors.
There was disguised in that
apparently mediocre individual the man who next to Lincoln was to play
the chief part in the saving
of his country. There was locked up in that ordinary
man one of the greatest military geniuses that ever lived. A quarter
of a century of ordinary events and life routine did
not even give a glimpse of the giant sleeping within him. He never
dreamed
what was inside of himself. Up to his thirty-ninth
year or later everybody who knew Grant would have laughed at the idea
(as
he would have done himself) that he had ability to
take any prominent part in the subduing of the great rebellion.
He was graduated twenty-first in a
class of thirty-nine at West Point. At thirty-two he was a nobody,
forced to resign from
the army because of his great weakness. He went into
the custom house, the real estate business, worked in a store, in a
tannery,
and was a comparative failure in them all. It was the
supreme emergency of a war which threatened to disrupt the nation that
revealed the real man to himself and to the world.
The late Justice Miller, who was for
years regarded as the ablest man in the United States Supreme Court,
told me that he
did not even begin to study law until he was
thirty-seven years old. He had not found himself until then. But in a
little
more than ten years from that time he was on the
Supreme Court Bench.
Many people pass their fiftieth, even
their sixtieth milestone, before they find themselves, before something
happens which
unlocks a new door in the great within of themselves
and reveals new powers, new resources, of which they had never before
been conscious. Then in a few years after their
discovery they have redeemed half a lifetime of ineffectiveness.
We often hear men and women who have
found themselves tell of the particular things which awakened their
ambition; the accident,
the sorrow, the emergency, the book, the suggestion,
the encouraging friend, which first gave them a glimpse of their own
possibilities, uncovered powers which they never
before dreamed they possessed. If all of the people who have done things
worthwhile in the world would only give an account of
how they were awakened, tell of the things that had aroused their
ambition,—the
incident, the circumstance, the book, the lecture, the
sermon, the advice, or the catastrophe, the failures, the crisis, the
emergency, the afflictions, the losses in their lives,
what a wonderful help it would be to the strugglers who are conscious
that they have locked up within them forces which have
not been aroused and which they cannot seem to get hold of.
The man who can write a book that
will enable people to discover their unused assets will do an
incalculable service to humanity.
Boosting from the outside will never
help us to discover ourselves. We do our greatest work, uncover most of
our latent power,
when struggling to make good, when striving to make a
place for ourselves in the world. Yet it is a strange fact that most
people look not only for their pleasures but for all
their personal resources outside of themselves. They go through life
complaining that they have nobody to help them, that
they have no chance such as many others have, excusing themselves for
their failure or mediocre success on the plea that
they lack capital, or “pull,” or opportunity, when they have locked up
right within themselves vast assets of untold value
which they have never developed and which they never can use until they
have found and made them available.
This is one reason why so many of the
sons and daughters of inherited wealth discover so little of
themselves. They go through
life indifferently, carrying their great possibilities
undeveloped to their graves, because there was no special motive for
effort, apparently no necessity to exert even the
surface power.
No son ever inherited wealth enough
to uncover his greater possibilities. No father can do this for his son;
it can be done
only by self-effort. Everyone who has ever made his
mark on the world, who has done things worthwhile, has found his
resources
in himself.
The necessity for personal effort has
made many a man famous, has compelled him to contribute to the uplift
of humanity, to
the progress of the world, who but for this priceless
spur would have remained a practically useless member of society.
It is a most unfortunate thing for any boy to be coddled and waited upon until he has formed habits which make it very unlikely
that he will ever exert himself sufficiently to arrive at the point of self-discovery.
A housewife explaining to her husband why the bread was not good said, “There is as good stuff in this loaf of bread as in
any loaf I ever made, but nobody can eat it because there is not enough yeast in it. It did not rise.”
This is just what is the matter with a
lot of young people with good material in them, good man timber, good
woman timber.
They lack yeast. There is not enough of the rising
quality, not enough of the yeast of a divine ambition in them to make
them
struggle to find and develop their highest power.
“Great masters are they who help you to find yourself,” said Dr. Frank Crane. “The others simply find you.”
There are a multitude of things which
assist our self-discovery. Keeping our minds in a positive, creative
condition; keeping
ourselves physically at the top of our condition, in
perfect health; maintaining mental poise, a cheerful, happy mental
attitude,
by keeping our minds free from fear and worry and
anxiety,—all of these things are great aids to self-discovery. And there
is no secret about any of these things.
Self-confidence is a potent self-discoverer. Distrust, self-depreciation closes the doors to the locked-up potencies and powers
within. Faith opens the door and releases them.
Seek every possible experience which
seems to open up your nature and release new force. For instance, great
lovers of music
after listening to a wonderful voice, or going to an
opera, feel something inside of them released, something which had been
locked up before, something which they never really
knew they possessed until then. Sometimes a great play will produce a
similar effect upon people. They leave the theater
feeling conscious of decided enlargement by the unlocking of latent
forces
within them. Our ideals are constantly being broadened
and elevated by similar experiences.
A youth perhaps has slumbering in his
nature great pent-up artistic or musical powers, but he has always
lived back in the
country, on a farm, where he never has come in contact
with musical or artistic people, never has been thrown in a musical
atmosphere. He never has heard music of any account
outside of his little church choir, and remains quite ignorant of his
latent possibilities until he goes to the city. There
he hears famous musicians, great singers in concerts, in opera, and
a new avenue is opened up in his nature, a new passion
is aroused which sweeps away his farm ideals, and his plans for his
career are instantly changed. He has discovered a new
force in himself, which henceforth is to govern his life.
Here is another youth whose whole
idea before he started for college was to go into the store, or some
other business, with
his father, but as he advanced in his studies, and the
inspiration of the college professors pushed his horizon of ignorance
a little farther and farther away, new forces were
opened up and he made discoveries in his nature which completely changed
his life aim.
Parents are often puzzled and
troubled at what they think is the fickleness of their sons when they
frequently change their
ideas about their future careers. This is often
because education unlocks new powers, opens up new possibilities to
them,
and changes their ideals and ambitions.
One of the great advantages of
education and wide experience is that these help us to uncover more and
more of our hidden
powers. And these seem inexhaustible, for, no matter
how many successive discoveries we make in ourselves, there apparently
is no diminution of the remainder. In fact, human life
seems to be a sort of a funnel. We pass into the small end at birth,
and the farther we go the larger and larger grows the
funnel. Our horizon keeps ever pushing out towards the Infinite, and
there seems no limit to our possible growth.
Many people go through life without having their nature opened up to any great extent because they do not seek the occasions
for growth. They do not take sufficient pains to get in an ambition-arousing, an ideal-awakening environment.
Not long ago I wound my watch at
night and in the morning I found that it had stopped. The hands were
just where they had
been when I wound it. I took it up; but the hands did
not move. Then I gave it a violent shaking and it started at once and
ran until the mainspring was exhausted the following
night.
The power which enabled the watch to do what it was made to do was there all the time. All it needed was a little shaking
up to start it going.
I have met many a youth who seemed to
be standing still; there seemed to be no power engine inside of him to
run his mental
machinery effectively and while I was wondering when
he would start up, his father, upon whom he was dependent, suddenly died
or some other misfortune befell him. The jolt started
his mental engine, and all at once he developed an amazing amount of
energy and executive ability, which no one ever before
dreamed he possessed. I have seen others whose road was made so smooth
and easy for them that they never received sufficient
jolting to set their mental engines working, and they have gone through
life with the power still unlocked inside of them. On
every hand we see even young men and young women standing still mentally
and spiritually, making no progress toward further
self-discovery.
They have ceased to grow.
Men and women who are trying to make
the most of their lives, never stop growing. They are always on the
road, because their
goal is always receding as they grow larger, broader
and more efficient. They only stop off at way stations to unpack a few
things which they no longer need, impedimenta which
hamper them, and then they resume their journey. This is the way all
along
the life path.
If you would get at your hidden
resources, stimulate your growth and your power, you must be continually
improving yourself
somewhere; increasing your intelligence by closer and
keener observation, by the constant study of men and things, the
broadening
of your mental and spiritual outlook, the getting away
from self and the enlarging of your sphere of service and helpfulness.
Reading the world’s great books—the Bible, Shakespeare, the life stories of great men and women, and association with noble
souls are great helps to young people on their voyage of self-discovery.
Think of the secret chambers of
possibilities which were unlocked in multitudes of people by men like
Lincoln. There are thousands
of people living today who are grander men and women,
better husbands and wives, better lawyers, better physicians, better
statesmen because of the example of Abraham Lincoln.
The story of his life, of what he accomplished, opened up new avenues
in their nature, our institutions are better, our
civilization is higher because this grand man lived.
I know of no other means of
self-discovery so potent as an inspiring book, and it is a great thing
to keep such books near
you, because ideals become dim if we do not constantly
stimulate them by the right mental food. Listening to a great orator
often stirs us to the very centers of our being, and
awakens new impulses, new powers and determination in many a soul who
up to that time had been asleep so far as knowing and
utilizing his inner powers were concerned. Perhaps you have had this
experience in listening to some great preacher or
lecturer who seemed to open up a new world to you and give you a glimpse
of realms in your nature
which otherwise might have remained forever hidden.
“Man becomes greater in proportion as
he learns to know himself and his faculty.” The more highly we
cultivate all our faculties,
the more deeply we draw upon our resources, the more
of our hidden selves we discover, the wider grows our vision. Life
becomes
a perpetual progress.
It has been a long journey up through
the ages from the brute to the man, and on the way up we have developed
such marvelous
powers and resources as our primitive ancestors never
dreamed of. Yet civilized man is still farther away from his ultimate
destination, the end of the path of ascent, than he
now is from the crude savage of his earlier stages.
Garrett P. Serviss says, “The human
brain is only in its infancy, and since we are aware of that, we have
good reason to hope
that in the future web shall not merely know that the
earth is full of power, but shall make that power, in some way, serve
our uses.”
We are all in a continuous process of
development, and, as yet, strangers to the immense possibilities that
sleep in the great
within of ourselves. Uncovering these possibilities,
finding our resources, should be the great object of every human being.
The wisest thought of the seven wise men of Greece was expressed in the two words carved over the entrance of the great Delphic
Temple:—“Know Thyself!”
“Know thyself!” This is really the chief business of man—to learn to know himself, to realize the power that is his through
his inseparable union with his Creator.
How To Attract Prosperity
Fears and doubts repel prosperity. Abundance cannot
get to a person who holds such a mental attitude. Things that are unlike
in the mental realm repel one another. Trying to
become prosperous while always talking poverty, thinking poverty,
dreading
it, predicting that you will always be poor, is like
trying to cure disease by always thinking about it, picturing it,
visualizing
it, believing that you are always going to be sick,
that you never can be cured.
Nothing can attract prosperity but that which has an affinity for it, the prosperous thought, the prosperous conviction, the
prosperity faith, the prosperity ambition.
Opulence follows a law as strict as
that of mathematics. If we obey the law we get the opulent flow. If we
disobey the law,
we cut off the flow. Most of us tap the great life
supply by inserting a half-inch pipe, and then pinch even this with our
doubts, fears and uncertainties. There is no lack in
Him in whom all fullness lies. The pinching, the limitation is in
ourselves,
“for He satisfieth the longing soul and filleth the
hungry soul with good things.”
We must conquer inward poverty before
we can conquer outward poverty. True prosperity is the inward
consciousness of spiritual
opulence, wholeness, completeness; we cannot feel poor
when we are conscious of being enveloped in the all-supply, that God
is our partner, our Shepherd, and that we cannot want.
A poor woman who had all her life
previously lived in the back country, moved to a progressive little
village where, to her
great surprise, she found that her new home was
lighted by electricity. She knew nothing about electricity, had never
even
seen an electric light before, and the little eight
candle power electric bulbs with which the house was fitted seemed very
marvelous to her.
Later, a man came along, one day,
selling a new kind of electric bulb, and asked the woman to allow him to
replace one of
her small bulbs with one of his new style sixty candle
power bulbs just to show her what it would do. She consented, and when
the electricity was turned on she stood transfixed. It
seemed to her nothing short of magic that such a little bulb could
give so wonderful a light, almost like that of
sunlight. She never dreamed that the source of the new flood of
illumination
had been there all the time, that the enormously
increased light came from the same current which had been feeding her
little
eight candle bulb.
We smile at the ignorance of this
poor woman, but the majority of us are far more ignorant of our own
power than she was of
the power of the electric current. We go through life
using a little eight candle power bulb, believing we are getting all
the power that can come to us, all that we can express
or that destiny will give us, believing that we are limited to eight
candle power bulbs.
We never dream that an infinite
current, a current in which we are perpetually bathed would flood our
lives with light, with
a light inconceivably brilliant and beautiful, if we
would only put on a larger bulb, make a larger connection with the
infinite
supply current. The supply wire we are using is so
tiny that only a little of the great current can flow through, only a
few
candle power, when there are millions flowing past our
very door. An unlimited supply of this infinite current is ours for
the taking, ours for the expressing.
Multitudes of human beings go through
life just as ignorant as was the poor country woman of the fact that
there is unlimited
light and unlimited power flowing right past their
doors ready for their use, and that they may use all of it they can
express.
They are getting no more from the vast resources at
their command than this woman was getting from the electric current.
They
seem to think that if they are expressing four
candles, or eight candles power, that it is all the infinite supply can
give
them, or all that they were intended to have. It never
occurs to them that the trouble is not in the current itself, but in
the small bulbs they are using.
Millions have died in mental and
physical penury, died weaklings, when they had within their own nature’s
vast possibilities
of wealth and power which were never utilized, because
they did not connect with the source which would have enabled them
to express wealth and power.
Most of us strangle our supply by our pinching thoughts, our stingy, poverty thought, our doubt and fear thoughts. We pinch
or entirely cut off the inflow of prosperity by our poverty-stricken mental attitude.
The stream of plenty flows toward the
open mind, the expectant mind. It flows toward faith and confidence and
away from doubt.
It will not flow toward a stingy, pessimistic
unbelieving mind, a fearing, worrying, anxious mind. We must keep the
current
open or the supply will be cut off. We cannot get a
sixty or a hundred candle power supply through a four or eight candle
power bulb.
The stream of plenty, of unlimited
opulence, is flowing right past your door, carrying an infinite,
never-ending supply of
all the good things that heart could wish for. If you
have the faith that creates, the faith that believes the best is coming
to you, you can reach out mentally into this great
stream of plenty—the universal supply—and get material aid to build what
you will. The supply is there. It rests with you to
make the connection that will draw it to you.
If all of the poverty-stricken people
in the world today would quit thinking of poverty, quit dwelling on it,
worrying about
it and fearing it; if they would wipe the poverty
thought out of their minds, if they would cut off mentally all relations
with poverty and substitute the opulent thought, the
prosperity thought, the mental attitude that faces toward prosperity,
they would soon begin to change conditions. It is the
dwelling on the thing, fearing it, the worrying about it, the anxiety
about it, and the terror of it that attracts us to it
and attracts it to us. We cut off our supply current and establish
relations
with want, with poverty-stricken conditions.
Many people who have become
interested in the new philosophy are greatly disappointed that they are
not making any appreciable
demonstration over poverty, that they are not
advancing their position in life, not improving their conditions as they
had
expected they would.
Now, my friend, the law of abundance,
of opulence, is as definite as the law of gravitation, and works just
as unerringly.
If you are not demonstrating as you expected to, you
are probably still held under the bond of mental limitation, for there
is no lack in “Him in whom all fullness lies.” There
is no limitation in the all-supply. The trouble is you try to tap it
with a miserable little half or quarter inch pipe
instead of a great big one, and the supply cannot flow through and flood
your life with abundance.
If you pinch your supply pipe with
your doubts and fears, your anxiety, the terror of coming to want, if
you do not believe
you can demonstrate abundance, you will get but a
meager, limited supply instead of the inexhaustible flow you might have.
In other words, the supply pipe is pinched only by
your own mental limitations. By your doubts and fears and worries and
unbelief,
you can cut off all the supply and starve or, by a
great magnetizing faith, a superb confidence in the all-supply, you can
flood your life with all good things.
The law of supply is scientific. It
will not act unless all the necessary conditions are fulfilled. Simply
believing in the
new philosophy and still keeping your old life doubts
and fear habits, living in your old thought habits of lack and poverty,
inefficiency, will not bring success. If you don’t
believe you will prosper and you don’t practice what you believe, you
will
get no results. If you would reap its fruits you must
obey the law of supply, the law of abundance, the law of prosperity.
Prosperity never comes by merely
wishing or longing for it. Keeping your mind fixed on it, simply
thinking of prosperity will
never bring it to you. This is only the first step.
You must cling to your prosperity thought, your prosperity ideal, but
you must also back it up with scientific methods, the
practical common-sense methods which all successful men employ in their
work. You might dream of abundance and prosperity all
your life-time and die in the poorhouse, if you did not back up your
dream with businesslike efficiency methods. That is,
you must be methodical, orderly, systematic, accurate, thorough, and
industrious. You must do everything to a finish. You
must fling your energy, your heart into your business, your profession,
your work, whatever it is.
One of the worst things about poverty is that it induces the habit of expecting poverty and failure, the habit of being half
reconciled to its necessity.
No matter how poor you may be, if you
have the right mental attitude you will not long remain poor. If you
are determined
to turn your back upon poverty and face toward
prosperity, however your actual conditions may contradict this; if you
really
believe that you are a child of the Creator and
Possessor of all things, that you were not intended for poverty, but
that
on the contrary the good things, the beautiful things
of life are for you, the life glorious and not the pauper or the drudge
life, you at once open your mind to the inflow of the
prosperity current.
Have you, who are beating against the
iron bars of poverty, ever stopped to think what marvelous things the
Creator has everywhere
provided for us His children? Just imagine the entire
universe, the great cosmic ocean of creative intelligence, packed with
all the riches, all the glorious things, the
magnificent possibilities the human mind can conceive, and then try to
picture
what it would mean to you and to all who are
complaining of lack and want if by some magic they could call out of
this universal
supply of creative intelligence anything which would
match their desires, their heart longings. Imagine this vast universe,
this ocean of creative energy, packed with
possibilities from which human beings could draw everything which the
wildest imagination
could conceive, everything they desire in life,
everything they need for comfort and convenience, even luxuries,—also
cities,
railroads, telegraphs and all sorts of wonderful
inventions and discoveries. You will say, doubtless, that such a thing
is
too silly to contemplate for a moment. Yet, haven’t
human beings been doing this very thing since the dawn of civilization,
all up through the ages?
Every discovery, every invention,
every improvement, every facility, every home, every building, every
city, every railroad,
every ship, everything that man has created for our
use and benefit he has fashioned out of this vast invisible cosmic ocean
of intelligence by thought force. Everything we use,
everything we have, every achievement of man is preceded by a mental
vision, a plan. Everything man has accomplished on
this earth is a result of a desire, has been preceded by a mental
picture
of it. Everything he has produced on this plane of
existence has been drawn out of this invisible ocean of divine
intelligence
by his thought force. His imagination first pictured
the thing he wanted to do; he kept visualizing this mental conception,
never stopped thinking, creating, until his efforts to
match his visions with their realities drew to him the thing he had
concentrated on.
We all imagine that we actually, of
ourselves, create these things. We do not. We simply work in unison with
the Creator,
and draw them out of the vast invisible cosmic ocean
of supply. But we must do our part or there will be no realization for
us. Just as the first step in an architect’s building
is his plan, so must we first make a plan or picture of the thing we
desire. The architect first sees in all its details in
his mind’s eye the building to be erected even before he draws his
plan on paper. He mentally sees the real building long
before there are any materials on the spot for its construction. His
plan has come out of the invisible, out of the
fathomless ocean of possibilities which surrounds us. All of our wants
and
desires can find their fulfillment in this unlimited
supply.
This is a marvelous revelation to
man, the significance of which most of us have not grasped. Only here
and there is there
one who utilizes it in his daily living. But science
is recognizing it. Edison says all scientists feel that “about and
through
everything there is the play of an Eternal Mind.” They
are recognizing that this is the first great Cause.
It is difficult to realize that every
instant, under the impulse of Eternal Mind, miracles are leaping out
from the cosmic
ocean of energy into objectivity to meet our wants, to
supply all our needs. Most of us are not able to grasp the idea that
there is wealth and beauty and unthinkable luxuries
waiting here for God’s children. And because of this we do not
materialize
the things we desire.
It is one of the most marvelous
things, in this wonderful plan of creation, that we actually live, move
and have our being
in this invisible ocean of limitless creative
material, and that all we have to do to attract what we want is to hold
the
right mental attitude toward it and do our best on the
physical plane to match it with its reality. Noah might have lighted
the Ark had he known enough. The force was there just
as today. When we once get it firmly fixed in our minds that in this
invisible world of possibilities is everything which
matches every legitimate desire and ambition, and that our own will come
to us if we visualize it intensely enough,
persistently enough, and do our best to make it real, we will no longer
live in
poverty and misery.
If you want to get away from poverty,
if you wish to demonstrate abundance, prosperity, you must form the
habit of mentally
living in abundance; live in the ideal of what you
want; that is, you must live the prosperity thought, you must hold the
thought of abundance. Saturate yourself with it. Then
the poverty thought cannot touch you. It will be neutralized because
you cannot hold in your mind two opposite thoughts at
the same time, and whatever thought you hold is a real creative force.
The great majority of poor people are poor thinkers, poor planners, and poor executives. They do not think prosperity, they
do not obey the law of opulence, and so they stay poor in the midst of abundance.
You can no more attain opulence while
holding the opposite thought than a youth could become a great lawyer
by concentrating
upon something else, thinking of other things all the
time. The specialist makes his mind a magnet to attract the thing he
is trying to attain. He dwells upon it, thinks of it,
bends all his energies toward it, dreams it, lives it; and eventually
draws it to him. In the same way, opulence,
prosperity, obeys the law of attraction.
The idea of opulence must be
implanted firmly in the subconscious mind, just as everything else which
we desire to bring about,
to draw out of the universal supply, must be impressed
upon the subconscious mind by registering our vow, our determination
there until it has become a fixed motive or actuating
principle. Then it becomes an active influence in the life, an
ever-increasing
mental magnet that attracts the thing desired.
Whatever we wish to bring about in the actual, we must first establish
in the
subconscious mind by a constant, positive, affirmative
attitude toward that thing.
It is because they understand the
importance, the imperative necessity, of this holding of the right
mental attitude, that
there is such a tremendous difference between the
poverty of people who have imbibed the new philosophy and those who are
still in the old thought. It is the difference between
poverty with hope, poverty with courage, poverty with the expectation
of something better coming, backed by a faithful
effort to improve one’s condition, and the poverty which is accompanied
by
despair, the poverty that has no hope for the future,
the poverty that expects nothing better, that looks forward only to
more and probably worse poverty, more pinching, more
want and suffering.
Even the poverty with hope and
expectation of better things is not a very comfortable state, but there
is no despair in it,
there is no real pain in it, there is not much real
distress, because hope sees the goal beyond the blackness, it gives a
light that dispels the gloom of limitation by showing a
vista of good things in process of realization. It is the poverty
which is accompanied by despair, which sees no light
ahead and forces men and women to drudge on day after day without
prospect
of relief or hope of betterment that grinds the life
out of its victims. This is the poverty that kills the spirit that
destroys
the buoyancy of life, the gladness and the joy, which
are the birthright of every human being.
The poverty of those who have seen
the light, who have gotten a glimpse of something better, the poverty
which sees something
ahead to work for, may be compared with the temporary
discomforts which a family camping out for the summer may have to put
up with. Knowing that their discomforts are temporary
they make light of them. They do not impair their happiness, because
they know conditions will soon change. They do not
worry about their situation as they would if it were permanent and could
not be remedied.
There are multitudes of ignorant,
undeveloped people who are like many of the squatters on the desert in
the arid lands of
the West. These squatters build shanties and cultivate
little patches around them, raising a few domestic animals to help
them eke out a living. They barely exist, and yet the
very soil from which they hardly get a living is rich with vast
potencies,
possibilities of bounteous harvests and the production
of great wealth. If these people knew enough to mix brains with the
soil, or if they would only settle somewhere near a
supply of water so that they could irrigate their farms, they might live
in luxury.
There is nothing lacking in the land,
but it must have water and intelligence to develop its resources. These
would make the
desert fruitful. Water and intelligence mixed with the
soil would perform miracles of cultivation where ignorance succeeds
in producing scarcely enough to support a miserable
existence.
Not far from such ignorant squatters I
have seen a portion of the same desert land enriched by water and
intelligent cultivation
until it had become a veritable Eden of delicious
fruits, vegetables, grains and flowers. Large families were living
comfortably
on an incredibly small piece of land, whereas before
the introduction of water they would have half starved on perhaps a
hundred
acres.
Most human beings live all their
lives on deserts which are teeming with marvelous potencies and
possibilities, but for lack
of knowledge they live in poverty. Their mental
resources yield nothing because they have not yet been developed. Some
of
us get a little irrigation into a corner of our lives
and raise a few vegetables. Some of us cultivate a few flowers, and
now and then one will get water and inspiration and
ambition enough upon a little larger section of his mental desert and
produce something worthwhile. But very few human
beings ever cultivate their entire resources.
The new philosophy teaches us how to
get hold of our resources, and how to use them, so as to get just what
we want. It teaches
us that the source from which all things spring is in
the great cosmic intelligence which fills all space, and that in this
vast cosmic ocean riches inconceivable are waiting to
be objectified and utilized by man. It teaches us that all these things
will respond to the right thought, the right motive,
and that we can call out everything we desire from this All Supply. It
holds that the reason why our lives are so lean, so
pinched and poor, why our achievement is so limited, so picayune, in
comparison
with what we are capable of, is because we do not draw
upon the All Supply.
Our narrow, limited, dwarfed ideals,
our poverty-stricken view of things, the limitations our own thought
imposes—these are
the things that rob us of power and keep us in
poverty. Our achievements or our possessions can never outrun our
convictions
or our ideals. We fix our own limitations.
When a man gets lost in the woods he
cannot tell the direction in which he is facing, because he has lost the
points of the
compass. Unless a man so lost can see the sun and
recover his bearings, he will walk around in a circle, thinking he is
going
in a straight line in a certain direction.
He makes no advance because he isn’t
facing toward his goal. He doesn’t know this, but after a while when he
finds he is not
getting toward any opening and doesn’t know how long
he may wander about in a circle, he gets discouraged. Millions of people
are lost in the dense woods of wrong thought. They are
not traveling toward the goal of prosperity. They see no light, no
way out of the woods, and they lose courage. They are
turned about mentally, and don’t know it.
If the people in the great failure
army today could only be given prosperity treatments and shown that they
are in their present
predicament because of their wrong mental attitude,
because they have been working for one thing and expecting something
else;
if they could only be turned squarely about so that
they would face the goal of their desire instead of turning their backs
upon it mentally, an enormous number of them would
even yet make a splendid success of their lives. That is all that
millions
of people who are comparative failures in life, as
well as the complete “down and outs,” need to be turned about so that
they
would face life in the right direction.
What a pity it is that in this land
of opportunity and plenty our Government should not have institutions
conducted by experts
for the treatment of poverty sufferers, those who are
obsessed with the idea that their poverty is unavoidable. These people
are just as much in need of prosperity treatments as
the patients in hospitals are in need of health treatments. Most of them
are curable. They have only lost their way on the life
path and are facing the darkness instead of the light, facing towards
the poverty goal instead of the prosperity goal. Their
mental attitude needs changing so it will point toward success instead
of toward failure, toward comfort and plenty,
opulence, instead of poverty and limitation. Mental prosperity
treatments would
kindle a new hope in their discouraged minds, and
expectancy of good things would take the place of despair. A new light
would
come into the eyes of those poor people; and if these
prosperity treatments were administered to poverty sufferers in every
country of the globe the world would take on a
different appearance.
The time is coming when the State
will have trained specialists, experts in the law of mental opulence, to
give such treatments
to the men and women who are in the great failure
army, those who are headed in the wrong direction, those who have lost
their
way on the life path. But there is no need for those
now suffering from poverty to wait for the coming of that time to be
cured. Any intelligent person can apply the law and
treat himself for prosperity.
Mental laws are clear and simple. We
know that the fear thought attracts more fear, the worry thought more
worry, the anxious
thought more anxiety, the hatred thought more hatred,
the jealous thought more jealousy, and the poverty thought more poverty.
This is the law of attraction. Like every other law,
it is unalterable.
The poverty disease can be cured only
by its antidote——the prosperity thought. You carry within you this
antidote to the poison
of poverty, of lack, of pinching, dwarfing limitation.
Use it, and cure yourself. The prosperity thought will kill the poverty
germ.
Keep your supply pipes open between
yourself and the infinite source of all supply. Don’t pinch them by
doubt, don’t cut off
the supply by limiting, pinching, poverty, lack
thought. Keep your supply pipes wide open by the consciousness of your
oneness
with the One, your connection with the All Supply.
Abundance follows a law as exact as
that of the law of mathematics. If we obey it we get the flow. If we
pinch it, strangle
it, we cut off the supply. Suppose a youth who had
decided to study medicine and become a doctor should say to himself: “I
cannot picture myself as a success because I don’t
know anything about what may come to me. Perhaps I haven’t the
qualifications
that make a successful physician. I may never become
one. I may be a failure. I doubt if I am fitted for it, but I’ll try,
anyway.” Do you think such a timid, doubting, negative
attitude would ever carry anyone to the success goal? Of course it
wouldn’t. The young medical student who is going to
succeed is the one who pictures himself constantly as a successful
physician,
sees himself in a fine office, with a lucrative
practice, climbing to the top of his profession. He is constantly
visualizing
himself as a successful physician.
Now, the same rule applies to the
poor man who wants to become prosperous. He must picture himself as
prosperous, he must
obey the law of opulence by holding the ideal of
opulence in his mind, and he must saturate himself with the prosperity
thought,
the thought of abundance.
If you wish to cure yourself of the
poverty disease you should begin by giving yourself prosperity
treatments something like
this. Say to yourself, “If I am God’s child I have
inherited all the good things of the universe. I am heir to all supply,
to the all-good. Poverty cannot touch the reality of
me any more than disease can, for the reality of me is health. Health
is the everlasting fact, and disease, sickness, is
merely the absence of the reality. Poverty is not my normal condition.
There can be no lack, no poverty for God’s image. ‘All
that my Father hath is mine.’”
Repeat daily the twenty-third psalm:
“The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in
green pastures;
he leadeth me beside the still waters,” etc. Follow
this during the day with frequent assertions of your kinship with the
Creator of all the universe. Commit these lines by
EllaWheeler Wilcox to memory, and frequently say them to yourself,
vigorously,
and with the force of absolute conviction:
I am success. Though hungry, cold,
ill-clad, I wander for a while, I smile and say: ‘It is but for a
time—I shall be glad
Tomorrow, for good fortune comes my way. God is my
Father, He has wealth untold; His wealth is mine, health, happiness and
gold.’
All the good things you need are
yours by inheritance. Claim them, expect them, work for them, believe
they are already yours,
and you will realize them in your life. If you
continually assert your kinship with God your Father, to whom all things
belong,
and send out the vigorous thought of abundance, a
generous supply of all you need—which is your birthright—poverty cannot
hold you its slave.
I was recently talking with a man who
only a few years ago was so poor that he and his wife and children were
reduced to a
diet of bread and crackers without butter. They
couldn’t pay even the cheapest rent or buy themselves comfortable
clothing.
In fact, they were rapidly heading toward the ranks of
the “down and outs.” Today they are living in luxury, in a sumptuous
hotel. They own a beautiful car, and have all they
need to make life comfortable. They do not appear like the same people
who but a comparatively short time ago were in a
condition of semi-starvation.
Whence the change? Did someone leave
them a fortune, or did they find a gold mine? No, nothing of that sort
at all. They simply
realized that their poverty was of their own making,
that the cause of their miserable condition was entirely mental. And
there and then they turned their backs on their
despair environment and resolved that, no matter what appearances were,
they
would face the light and struggle toward it. As a
result they began in a very short time to attract better things.
The whole family has now taken a new
lease of life. The expression of despair and misery has gone out of
their faces, and
is replaced by the light of hope and joy. There is
just the difference in their appearance and condition between despair
and
gladness, between the hope and expectation of more of
the good things which belong to them, and the fear of want, the misery
of grinding limitations.
Psychology is teaching us that all forms of discouragement, despondent thoughts, thoughts of doubt, of fear, of worry, must
be kept out of the mind, for it cannot create while these enemies are in possession of the mental kingdom.
We are finding that in order to
create, to build, we must hold a constructive mental attitude all the
time, that we must keep
all negatives, all thoughts of discouragement,
despondency, of possible failure out of the mind. We are learning
through psychology
that we can produce only that which we concentrate
upon, that which we constantly think of; that only that which is
dominant
in our mind, whether it is beneficial or injurious
will be reproduced in our lives.
Your mental attitude will lead you into the light or hold you in darkness. It will lead you to hope or despair, to a glorious
success or a miserable failure, and it is entirely within your own power to choose which it shall be.
Successful people, without knowing
it, perhaps, are constantly giving themselves prosperity treatments,
success treatments,
by encouraging themselves, by making their minds
positive, so that they will be immune from all negative, discouraging,
poverty
thought currents. Holding the success thought, the
prosperity ideal, constantly dwelling upon one’s successful future,
expecting
it, working for it,—these are, whether you know it or
not, success, prosperity treatments.
Take, for example, men like Charles
M. Schwab. Ever since Mr. Schwab was a poor boy starting in life he has
been giving himself
success treatments. He has held the ideal of
prosperity, the vigorous, robust determination to be successful, to be
prosperous.
He has always faced the prosperity goal. If he had
allowed himself to yield to the many discouragements he has had he never
would have been the world’s greatest steel master
today, perhaps the greatest that ever lived. But he always triumphed
over
these negative, destructive, discouraging thoughts, by
insisting on holding to the prosperity, the success, ideal.
Suppose that every little while Mr.
Schwab should stop holding the success ideal and should indulge in
discouraging, despondent
thoughts, allow himself to get down in the dumps and
feel that good fortune was deserting him, what do you think the result
would be? Why, he would probably lose more in a single
day by such negative treatments than he could neutralize in a week
of prosperity treatments.
Every time you indulge in
discouraging and gloomy, despondent thoughts, every time you allow
yourself to get down in the dumps
or in the blues, you are tearing down what you have
been trying to build up by your success treatments, by holding the
prosperous
thought. Your attitude is hostile to prosperity, and
your very atmosphere blights and strangles it. You practically say, “I
long to have you, Mr. Prosperity, but I don’t believe I
ever will. You were evidently not intended for me, for everything
I do ends in failure. There must be some strange fate
that is keeping me from the success and prosperity I want. I really
never expect to be prosperous, although I am working
hard to get you, Mr. Prosperity.”
It is such a mental attitude as this
that is driving prosperity away from multitudes of people. If you want
to better your
condition you must get away from the conviction of
poverty, you must keep the want thought, the poverty thought and
conviction
out of your mind; for these connect you all the time
with the poverty and the lack thought currents from other like minds.
Multitudes of people through
ignorance of the law condemn themselves to lives of poverty. They do not
realize that, every
time they think or say that they never expect to get
away from the clutches of want, that no matter how hard they work there
is nothing but the everlasting drudgery, grind and
poverty for them, that fate is against them and they are doomed to
remain
poor, they are confirming and strengthening poverty
conditions.
If we are ever going to enjoy abundance, we must talk abundance and freedom, not poverty and limitation. We must think abundance
and not dam the stream of our supply so that we will get little drizzles instead of a generous flow.
What would you think of a prince who
should go away from his father’s palace and live in a poverty-stricken
environment, in
the midst of lack and want, and who should constantly
claim that he couldn’t do any better, that this was what was intended
for him? You would say that it was his own fault; that
there was plenty in his father’s house and that it was his any time
he chose to claim it; that the fatted calf and the
royal robe were always waiting for him.
Yet most of us act just as foolishly.
There is plenty of everything waiting for you in the All-Supply in our
Father’s house.
It is yours by right of inheritance. Why don’t you
claim it? You cannot get it until you do claim it, any more than the
prodigal
son could enjoy his father’s bounty while he continued
to put it from him and feed instead on the husks of swine.
Prosperity, or opulence, in the
larger sense in which we use it, is everything that is good for us, an
abundance of all that
is beautiful, uplifting and inspiring in life. It is
everything that will enrich the personality, the experience, the
spiritual
life.
This opulence, which includes
everything we can desire, is intended for all God’s children. All we
have to do to participate
in it is to reach out into the cosmic intelligence
with our thought, with our ideals, our aspirations and attract our own.
Thinking All Over
Every cell in us thinks. -Thomas A. Edison.
Each cell in the body is a conscious intelligent being. -Professor Nels Quevil.
Modern science has proved that intelligence is not confined to the brain cells, but that we think as a whole, that all the
cell life takes part in the thinking process.
Scientists tell us that the
individual cells in a piece of flesh taken from any part of the body and
placed near a certain
drug which is injurious to cell life will draw away as
far as they can from this injurious substance. On the other hand, when
a substance friendly to cell life is placed near it
the cells will draw as close as possible to this friendly substance and
apparently try to absorb it. In other words, these
cells manifest the power of intelligent selection, or choice.
One reason why our mental attitudes,
our hopes, our fears, our joys, our sorrows, have such a tremendous
influence upon our
bodies, our lives, is because, as Edison says, every
cell in us thinks. And since this is true, we know that every thought,
every impression made on the mind, every mental
attitude, affects all of the cells of the body, affects the whole
organism.
We have been so accustomed to
confining intelligence to the brain alone that it is difficult to think
it is a product of the
cellular activity of the entire body,—brain, muscles,
bones, tissues, and all. In fact, we think all over. The mind is the
product of activity in all the cells of the body.
The latest scientific investigations
seem to show that each one of the tiny microscopical cells of a body,
invisible to the
naked eye, contains in itself the creative,
reproducing, repairing, recreating qualities, determining the entire
future of
the body which these cells compose; containing the
plan, the development, the limitation of growth, that is, physically
considered.
Each cell is endowed with
intelligence and has a consciousness of its own, and, although each one
of these cells has a separate
consciousness, the communal, or community cells all
work together for the federation of the whole in a most orderly,
scientific
manner. They build, repair, renew, and maintain the
entire organism of the body.
Professor Nels Quevli in his latest
book, “Cell Intelligence,” says, “The cell is a conscious intelligent
being, and by reason
thereof plans and builds all plants and animals in the
same manner as man constructs houses, railroads and other structures.”
He believes that the individual cells of any animal,
acting harmoniously with the entire organism, alter the plan of the
animal
to meet any new demand caused by the changes of
habitat of the animal, such as environment, or the changes made in
response
to the demand for the creature’s protection, as in the
case of the animals which change their colors to correspond to the
coloring of the trees or the rocks upon which they
live so as to make them invisible to their enemies.
Referring to the modification of the
cells in the organism to meet the new demand of the animals, Professor
Quevli says of
the giraffe’s neck, that the primitive giraffe was
forced to rely less and less upon grass and more on the leaves of trees
for his food. The intelligent cells of his body began
(by means of the sub-division of the cells) to lift him up on his four
legs, and to stretch out his neck.
To a similar necessity the cells of the elephant species threw out his snout into a long tree trunk with a pair of handy fingers
at the tip.
This scientist believes that the
cells in any part of the body contain a property of memory reaching back
through the ages
to the primordial cells, to the beginning of life
itself, and that this, with other characteristics have been passed along
by the divisions of the cells. These qualities are
preserved when the cells divide. All the qualities which were in the
original
cell before the division are passed along to each of
the new halves. The new cells formed are really a part of the old one;
contain everything which the original cell contained.
The cells do not increase in size
with the growth of the animal which they build. The growth comes from
the division of the
cells, thus multiplying them. This process keeps up,
for example, in the infant, until it has attained its full growth, that
is, until it has filled out the plan in the individual
cells themselves.
“You can clearly see,” says the
professor, “the skill and experience possessed by the cells, or, more
correctly speaking,
by the individuals composing the cells, and which they
have accumulated through the vast ages of experience and handed on
to posterity and preserved.”
We are apt to think of the body as a
collection of different organs and that these organs are in a way
separate, of different
material or construction. But we are simply one
enormous mass of tiny cells closely related to one another. Because the
bones,
for example, are harder than the brain, we think there
can be little affinity between them, but, as a matter of fact, all
the twelve different tissues of the body are made up
of cells of varying consistency, all of which have come from one
primordial
cell— and what affects one cell anywhere in the body
affects all. Each cell is an entity or little self, and we are made up
of these billions of our little selves or cells.
These tiny selves are like members of
a great orchestra which instantly respond to the keynote given them by
their leader.
Whatever tune our mentality plays they play. They
become like our thought. Every suggestion, every motive that moves the
individual,
is reflected in these cells. Every cell in the body
vibrates in unison with every thought, every emotion, every passion that
sways us, and the result on the cell life corresponds
with the character of the thought, the emotion or passion.
The ego is the master spirit, the
leader of all the little self or cell communities. All the cells of the
body will do its
bidding. The ego can think health into the cells or it
can think disease. It can think discord or harmony into them. It can
think efficiency or inefficiency into them. It can
send a success thrill or a failure thrill through all of the cells, a
thrill
of masterfulness or of weakness. It can send through
them a vibration of fear or of courage, of selfishness or of generosity.
It can send vibrating through all the cells of the
body a thrill of hope or of despair, a thrill of love or of hate; a
triumphant
vibration or a vibration of defeat, of failure, of
disgrace. In short, whatever thought the ego, or I, sends out will stamp
itself on every cell in the body, will make it like
itself.
Surgeons report that after a great
victory, for instance, the wounds of the soldiers, as has been noticed
in many similar
instances, heal much more rapidly than the wounds of
the soldiers in the defeated army, showing that the mental exhilaration,
which accompanies the consciousness of victory, is a
stimulant, a tonic, while conversely the despondency, which accompanies
defeat, is also a physical depressant.
The cells are practically an
extension of the brain. Each is a sub-station connected with the central
station of the brain.
Anger, hatred, jealousy or malice in the brain means
anger, hatred, jealousy or malice in every cell in the body. Trouble
in the brain means trouble everywhere. Happiness in
the brain means happiness everywhere. When the mind is full of hope,
bright
prospects, the body is full of hope, alert, efficient,
eager to work. When there is discouragement in the mind there is
discouragement,
despondency everywhere in the body. Ambition is
paralyzed, enthusiasm blighted, efficiency strangled.
For a long time surgeons have known
that certain kinds of cancer are produced by mental influences; that not
only cancerous
tendencies latent in the system are thus aroused and
their development encouraged, but that some kinds of cancers, even when
there is no previous hereditary tendency or taint may
be absolutely originated in this way. This scientific conclusion has
been tremendously emphasized by the great increase in
the development of cancer in those who have been hard hit by the war,
especially those who have lost relatives or dear
friends, or whose loved ones have been frightfully mangled, maimed for
life.
Their peculiar mental suffering, the mingled worry,
grief and anxiety of these people has aggravated cancerous tendencies
and originated many new cases of cancer where no
previous tendencies to that dread disease existed.
A great Paris specialist, Dr.
Theodore Truffler, cites a case where a patient who showed no
predisposition whatever to cancer
developed it after much mourning for the loss of his
two sons in battle. This grief had simulated into a real cancer eruption
which before had been apparently unimportant.
Not only do worry, fear, and anxiety
and great grief induce cancer, but hatred, grudges, chronic jealousy,
also originate
several different kinds of cancer, and very materially
hasten the development of cancerous tendencies which they do not
originate.
Many kinds of skin disease, kidney
trouble, dyspepsia, liver trouble, brain and heart trouble, are now
known to result from
mental causes, such as chronic hatred and jealousy.
These keep the blood and other secretions in a state of chronic
poisoning,
which devitalizes the whole body and encourages the
development of latent disease tendencies or of disease germs.
Every physician knows that
discouragement is a depressant, that melancholia will greatly increase
the activity and hasten
the development of physical diseases. We little
realize what we are doing when we are constantly sending messages of
discouragement,
of fear, of worry through all the billions of cells in
the body. We little realize what it means when we talk discouragement,
when we give up to the “blues,” when we lose courage,
faith, hope, and confidence in ourselves. It really means panic,
disorganization,
all through the cell life of the body. Mental
depression is felt in every remotest cell. It unnerves every organ, and
reduces
the entire organism to a state of weakness and
inefficiency, if not to utter collapse.
This is the reason why people
sometimes fall in a faint from the shock of bad news, when sudden death
or a frightful accident
comes to those dear to them. The painful sensation it
causes is not all in the head; it is not all in the brain. The effect
of the shock visits every cell in the body. They are
depressed all over. The whole cell life feels the shock. Every bit of
bad, discouraging news, depression, fear, worry,
anxiety, jealousy, hatred,—these send their disintegrating messages
through
all the cell colonies, all the dependencies in the
body.
On the other hand, good news, the
expectation of better things, the renewal of hope, confidence, the
upbuilding of faith in
glorious things that are coming in the near
future—these act like a tonic on those who are “down and out.” They
refresh and
renew the entire being.
The trouble is we have been so in the
habit of thinking of the body outside of the brain itself as a sort of
unintelligent
matter, absolutely dependent upon the control of the
brain, that it is very difficult for us to grasp the truth that the
intelligence,
the planner, the builder, the repairer, is in each
cell.
When we are wounded, for instance, we
do not deliberately with our brain send a message to the cells to
repair and rebuild
where the damage has been done, where the tissues have
been lacerated or cut away. The cells themselves do that, they are
the builders. They built the body originally; and they
maintain and repair it.
Professor Quevli says that in each
division of the cell, or nucleus, a crowd of skilled workers,
intelligent builders, exist.
He believes in the interesting theory that the planner
of the cell, the planner of the individual, is in the microscopical
cell itself. How could we imagine a force molding,
fashioning, creating, modifying, changing, nourishing, to exist outside
of the cell life! The only sound theory is that this
force or intelligence is an indestructible part of the cell life itself,
that it is the great cosmic intelligence everywhere
present. It is life itself; we cannot image it absent from any atom,
molecule,
or electron in existence, any more than we can image a
spot where the mathematical law does not apply, or that two and two
do not make four.
Some of our most advanced scientists
believe that the cells of the different organs of the body constitute
what we may term
a community, mind or brain, which presides over the
life and functions of each particular organ. These community brains,
such
as the stomach, the liver, the kidneys, the heart, get
their instructions from the great central station of intelligence,—the
brain.
Every cell in the body is an
energetic little worker, incessantly laboring for the community to which
it belongs. Take, for
example, the group of cells which form the liver. The
office of this organ is to secrete bile, manufacture sugar, and
eliminate
poisons which might be fatal to other organs, such as
the kidneys. Every cell is occupied in this important work.
Another group of these tiny cell workers, that which forms the heart, are continually busy in the service of this great central
organ. Its duty is to keep the blood in circulation, never to let it stop an instant, day or night.
A third group of these wonder workers
form the stomach. The office of the stomach is to begin the process of
digestion, to
manufacture from the blood the acid which helps to
disintegrate the food. It also does much of the work which the teeth
were
intended to do, but which we usually neglect.
Another community of cells constitutes the kidneys. Their office is to strain out of the blood the poisons which the other
organs have not eliminated, and which if allowed to remain would injure the more vital organs.
Here is a group which forms the thyroid gland, whose work is to store up certain salts and other substances for future use,
and to assist in regulating the nutrition and the heat of the body.
And here is another group, perhaps
the most important, which forms the leader of all the other community
centers—the brain.
This thinking organ is the seat of distribution of all
orders through the marvelous system of nerves, which run from the great
central station to every corner of the body,
communicating instantly with every one of the billions of the cell
citizens in
the whole system.
Like those in all the other organs,
each cell of the brain is constantly at work. Now, these billions of
workers, all specialists
in their line, no cell doing the work delegated to
another, are dependent on the nourishment which they get from the blood.
If the blood is poor, thin, deteriorated by imperfect
or insufficient food, or if it is poisoned by dissipation or by wrong
thinking, then their work as builders suffers
accordingly.
When the blood for any reason is thus
impoverished the cells of the stomach and other digestive organs are
too feeble to do
their work properly. And when the food is not properly
digested, it putrefies and the poisons it generates are absorbed by
the body, causing trouble everywhere throughout the
system. The heart action is impaired. The circulation of the blood is
poor, and all the tissues suffer from lack of
nutrition. The vigor of the body is depreciated, because the digestive
organs
cannot manufacture force, robustness, out of vitiated
blood. The billions of cells suffer from malnutrition, or
semi-starvation,
and your powers begin to wane. There is a lack of vim
and force and fire in your efforts. The cry for food, for nutrition,
from the suffering cells goes to the brain. It
convinces you that something is the matter, and you say you are sick,
you are
down and out, you don’t feel like anything. Your
ambition sags, and off you go to a drug store or a doctor for a tonic, a
stimulant, something which will brace you up, make you
feel better. Perhaps you go to a saloon and get one bracer after
another,
with nothing but feeble, temporary results. Then you
begin to fear you are going to be laid up, that you are developing some
disease. The terrors of a possible breakdown add its
poisoned burden to the already poor, vitiated blood, and matters grow
worse.
Instead of radically remedying such
an unfortunate condition by satisfying the intelligent cry of the cells,
most people begin
to add the whip to the tired horse as a stimulant, a
tonic, when the horse needs nothing but good wholesome food and rest,
harmony in the mental kingdom.
Everywhere in the body Nature tries
to save us from our ignorance, our mistakes, our animal appetites, our
dissipations, our
wrong thinking. Every cell in the body is constantly
on guard, trying to help us, trying to save us from our own ignorance
and sins.
Much of what we call intuitive
perception is due to the cell intelligence in the various parts of the
body. What is it, for
instance, that tells us when we have eaten enough to
supply the bodily needs? The brain does not know it, because none of
the food which we eat at an ordinary meal has had time
to affect the brain before the appetite has been satisfied. What is
the appetite? It is the demand for nourishment from
the different cells of the body. It is not located in any one place. The
cells call for food, and it is their intelligence that
makes this call. We say we instinctively feel when we have eaten
enough.
We do not want any more and our appetite declines. But
this knowledge does not come from the brain alone. It is a feeling
of all the cells of the body, that there is sufficient
in the stomach to supply its needs. The appetite wanes accordingly,
but it must be intelligence back of this which makes
this decision. The brain cells simply make a call for their own needs;
they do not make calls for the liver, the heart, the
kidneys, the muscles.
The mental healing of disease rests
upon the fact that intelligence is not confined to the brain, but that
there is intelligence
in the cells of the body generally, as has been proved
in the case of the deaf, dumb and blind. In their efforts at
self-expression
these people have developed the intelligence of the
finger tips to such an extent that actual gray matter cells, similar to
those in the brain, have been found there. In other
words, gray brain cells are developed in the finger tips of the blind.
It is well known that this gray brain
matter found in the finger tips of the blind is also found in other
parts of the system,
especially in many ramifications of the spinal nerves.
It is found everywhere along the tract of the nervous system.
Walking and all of the involuntary
movements of the body are controlled by the intelligence of the local
cells. ‘We do not
stop and premeditate, or will, every step. We take
each one automatically, without any exercise of the will. An
intelligence
outside the brain must also keep up the heart beats
and the breathing while the brain is unconscious during sleep, and even
while we are awake, for we make no conscious effort at
any time to keep up these functions.
Nor does the expert pianist think of
the movements of his fingers when he is playing. In fact, he may all the
time be thinking
of something else. His mind may be wandering, and yet
he plays intelligently because intelligent cells are distributed
throughout
his muscular nervous system.
To say that the brain educates the
spinal column and the nervous branches to perform this piano miracle is
no scientific explanation.
The only satisfactory explanation is that all the
cells of the body are intelligent, that we think as a whole. We have
inherited
the race belief that thinking is confined to the
brain. But the fact is the difference between the brain cells and the
cells
in other parts of the body is not nearly so great as
we once thought. Many brain accidents have shown that the destruction
of large portions of the brain tissue does not
materially affect the power of thought, any more than the destruction of
tissue
in other parts of the body affects it. Not only this,
but large portions of the brain have been removed, and yet the
individual
has gone on with his work apparently as before. Here
is an interesting experiment performed by a noted scientist which gives
a striking proof of cell intelligence outside of the
brain. This experiment has been tried again and again.
“If a drop of acid is placed on the
lower surface of the thigh of a frog after its head has been cut off,
the decapitated
frog will rub off the drop of acid with the upper
surface of the foot on the same leg. Scientists have cut off this foot
after
the head was cut off, and the headless animal, after
trying time and again to rub off the acid with the same foot as before,
will finally use the foot on the other leg and
continue until it succeeds in rubbing off the acid.”
Here we certainly have proof of intelligence combined with harmonious contractions in order to bring about certain definite
results. It is a proof that an intelligent mind acts without a brain.
We know that the brain carries on but
a small part of the work of the bodily organism. All of our involuntary
movements, the
manufacture of the fluids of the body, of the bodily
secretions, the changing of foods into tissues, are not affected by the
voluntary brain. The work of the chemical laboratory
in the body, which is simply beyond human comprehension, is all carried
on by intelligent organ cells outside of the brain.
The brain cells, it is true, are more highly sensitized, more
responsive,
than the cells of some other parts of the body. They
form, so to speak, a sort of mouthpiece for the other cells, and this
is where they find their outward expression.
There is no doubt that the billions
of cells composing the body all belong to one intelligent whole. What
affects one cell
affects all, so that whatever passes through the brain
cells passes through every other cell in the body. We know how
instantaneously
news, a sudden shock of any sort, received at the
central brain station is sent to all the organs. The heart, the kidneys,
the liver, all of them are at once affected by it.
This shows how intimately they must be tied together. The entire body is
evidently a sort of an extended brain.
If someone should scratch one end of a
piece of timber a hundred feet long with a nail, and your ear were at
the other end
of the timber, you could hear the scratch instantly.
The distance does not seem to make any difference in the transmission
of the sound. In a similar way, every thought, every
mood, every emotion goes instantly to every part of the body. For
example,
you may have just sat down to your Thanksgiving dinner
with a ravenous appetite, when the gastric juice is trickling from
every gastric follicle in your stomach, and you
suddenly receive a telegram announcing a terrible catastrophe, in which
some
of those dearest to you have been mutilated or killed.
Instantly the gastric follicles cease to generate the gastric juice
and become dry and parched, as does the tongue in a
fever. The heart and the other organs feel the shock at the same time
and are equally distressed, and their action
inhibited. In short, the different organs and functions respond
instantly to
the painful news, showing that whatever enters the
mind goes immediately to the entire cell life of the body.
The condition of your cells, of your
tissues, of your organs, will depend upon the message which you send to
them through
your thought, through your convictions regarding them,
whether of strength or weakness, of health or disease. You think clear
through every cell to the farthest extremities of your
body. And as you think regarding your cells so they are. Their fate
is largely in your hands. They will obey whatever
orders you give them. By your mental attitude toward the cells of the
various
organ communities you can make your physical organs
perform their functions normally or abnormally; you can insure health
or bring about disease; you can prolong your life or
you can shorten it.
We know that by concentrating our
thought intensely upon any part of the body the blood vessels in that
organ or locality
expand, and an extra supply of blood is sent there. In
other words, the blood follows the thought. Professor Alexander Graham
Bell told me that when on long riding trips in
Halifax, in severe weather, he could warm his feet by concentrating his
thought
upon them, so that in a short time they would be all
aglow. This method of quickening the circulation of the blood has been
tried so often that scientists no longer question it.
Elmer Gates has often tried the
following experiment as a proof of the power of mind in this direction.
Immersing his hands
in two separate vessels of water just even full, he
would first concentrate his thought on the right hand until the water
in the vessel would overflow; then reversing, he would
concentrate on the left until that vessel would overflow.
These experiments give a little idea of what thought can do in stimulating or depressing the blood, on which the life of the
body depends—“for the blood is the life.”
It is well known that the fear
thought, the thought, for example, that you have Bright’s disease, or
that you have inherited,
and are developing, tuberculosis, causes congestion in
that part of your anatomy on which it is fixed. And if the fear thought
becomes chronic you will have chronic congestion
there, which will aid in developing the thing you fear.
Take the case of a young girl who is
told by her friends that she has probably inherited tuberculosis,
because one or both
of her parents died of that disease. If every time she
is exposed to inclement weather, gets her feet wet, or gets in a draft,
she is reminded that she is taking great chances, she
develops a fear thought. She concentrates this fear upon her lungs,
causing congestion there, irritation, coughing. This
increases her fear and causes loss of appetite.
Then, of course, she loses
nourishment, and there is a general decline in her physical condition.
Naturally a loss in weight
follows. This symptom frightens her still more,
because victims of tuberculosis are always weighing themselves,
imagining
they are shrinking. Her fears cause imperfect
digestion, imperfect assimilation, and hence imperfect repair and
renewal of
lost tissue. She begins to lose color and then
everybody tells her that she is not looking well. This loss of color is
another
dread symptom, and so it goes on until the fear, the
conviction that she is developing the fateful disease, cuts down the
last remnant of her disease-resisting power, and she
falls a victim to any latent tubercular germs in her system. She stamps
her fear thought on the cell life of her lungs and
other organs until they respond to it, become like it. Multitudes of
people
have tubercular germs in their system which never
develop if they hold the health thought and build up a strong
disease-resisting
power.
Disease germs feed upon the debris or
broken-down tissue in the body. They are scavengers and do not feed
upon healthy tissue,
healthy food. But when the tissues begin to break down
through fear, the disease-resisting power deteriorates rapidly, until
the body gets below what we may call the health line.
Then all sorts of scavengers or enemy germs, waiting for their
opportunity,
begin to feed upon the broken-down tissue; the blood
becomes impoverished, and the disease gets a hold on its victim.
There is no doubt that disease in the
various organs is often due to utter discouragement which the organ
cells have received
from the central station—the brain. The cells of the
whole body often give up their struggle for life because of the
discouragement
of the master cells. Time and again when the heart had
ceased to beat, and apparently the last breath had been taken, life
has been called back to a seemingly dead body just by
strong reassuring words, by arousing and restoring the lost confidence
of the cells. When there is supreme confidence of
victory in all of the cells of the body, life will not depart. But when
the cells in the different organ communities get from
the brain the message that the death sentence has been pronounced by
the physician, or when the patient gives this fatal
prognosis as his own conviction, then there is no hope for the dependent
communities to try to save the situation.
Is it strange that the cells of the
diseased organs should give up the struggle and cease to fight for life
when the brain
has given up hope and sent a message of despair
through the whole system? These impaired cells were having a hard time
of
it before. There was probably a panic in the little
cell community, and now, when the grand commander of all of the cells
of the body gives up, the depending organ communities
also naturally give up.
On the other hand, when the cells all
through the body get the thrill of confidence, of hope, of faith in
their strength,
from the center of intelligence, then they are
comparatively free from danger of death. There is enough vitality,
enough latent
energy in many a body which has just breathed its last
to re-energize and bring it back to life again if such confidence could
be restored to the mind that it would utilize the
latent force in the apparently dead cells.
Since thought has such a tremendous
influence upon the cell life of the body, how important it is that our
thoughts and images
and emotions should be friendly and not hostile,
should be helpful and not injurious! How imperative that we hold only
those
images in the mind, visualize only those things which
are beneficial, kindly, uplifting to the body, not those things which
tend to devitalize, to dwarf and ruin it!
The essential thing is to keep the
cells in all of the organs happy, contented, encouraged, and harmonious.
If we do this,
we shall be happy, contented, and harmonious
ourselves. That is, the resultant of the harmonious action of the entire
cell
life of the body must be efficiency, harmony and
happiness for the whole man.
Every time you allow a vicious
thought, a despondent thought, a thought of failure, of fear, of poverty
to enter your mind,
every time you allow a foreboding of some threatening
event to take hold of you, every time you indulge in jealousy, in envy,
in hatred, in revenge, in any evil emotion, every cell
in your body is correspondingly affected. So, too, they take on your
enthusiasm, your zest, your cheer, your courage, your
faith. They are encouraged or discouraged; they expand or contract their
possibilities at your suggestion.
What you think about the cells of any
organ they will return to you in kind. You can no more get the best
from the cells of
your stomach, and your other digestive organs, for
instance, when you are all the time saying uncomplimentary things about
them, always discouraging them, abusing them, than you
can get the best out of your employees or your children by the same
methods. When you treat them in this way, talk against
them, antagonize them, they become depressed, and express resentment
in non-performance of their functions.
If we treated our children or our
employees as many of us treat the millions of tiny cells in our stomach,
our liver, our
kidneys, or other organs; if we were constantly
complaining of them, condemning them for not doing their work better, if
we
were suspicious of them, watching them and always
fearing they would play us false, we certainly would not get the best
out
of them.
Imagine what a pessimistic, dyspeptic
grumbler will do to the cells during a life time of fault-finding, of
discouraging suggestions!
Think what a man does to his digestive organs who is
always saying they are no good, that they have gone back on him, that
they cannot digest anything which he likes, and that
he can only eat the things which he despises! Is it any wonder that he
has chronic dyspepsia when he swallows a mouthful of
dyspepsia with every mouthful of food, and then continually hammers away
and denounces his digestive organs between meals?
Think of what this mental attitude means not only to his digestive
organs
but to the other organs of his body!
If you suffer from indigestion, it is
because you don’t believe that your digestive organs can take proper
care of your food.
You suffer because you expect to suffer. You get what
you expect. There is everything in expecting your body to perform all
its functions normally, healthfully. Think of your
human machine as perfect; treat your organs as though they were normal.
Expect your body, all the cell communities, to express
harmony, not discord. Don’t harbor a suspicious attitude toward any
of your physical organs. Believe that they are going
to do the work which they were intended to do, and to do it properly.
Trust them just as you would trust your children, your
employees. Believe in them, and treat them kindly. Instead of blaming
and abusing, encourage and praise them, and they will
perform their functions normally and give you robust health.
If the cells in any organ are
diseased, the health suggestion, the health affirmation, the holding of
the health ideal in
the brain will tend to heal them. To send life
currents of healing thought sweeping through any defective or diseased
organ
tends to stimulate the cell life, to encourage the
cell organization,— the stomach, the kidneys, the heart, the liver, the
lungs, etc.— to respond to the optimistic suggestion.
In other words, thinking health, thinking life and truth into a diseased
organ, tends to destroy the disease infection, to
arouse latent life force in the cells, and to bring about normal health
conditions.
We know that we get out of the
various organs about what we expect. The brain is no exception. Expect
nothing, get nothing.
If you have no confidence in your brain it will return
only weakness or mediocrity to you. On the other hand, if you have
a firm, vigorous faith in it, if you expect great
things from it, it will match your expectation.
The same is true of the muscles of
every part of the body. Believe in your muscles, trust them, believe
they are strong and
vigorous, have faith that you can lift an enormous
weight or can perform great feats as an athlete, and your five hundred
muscles will come to your rescue and redeem your
faith.
This is true even of animals. When
the race horse has lost confidence in its speed it never regains it. As
long as the animal
believes he can beat the others in the race he wins.
But when it has been beaten a few times it gets the habit of being
beaten,
and cannot regain its confidence. It believes it is
going to be beaten, and it is.
The art of radiating health thoughts
through and through the whole system until every nerve and fiber, every
cell in the body,
feels the electric thrill of the health force, is the
art of arts. It means the achievement of perfect health, of perfect
efficiency and of perfect happiness.
Just as we can antidote disease in
the cell life by health thoughts, in a similar way we can send out from
the central brain
station thoughts of prosperity, of opulence, thoughts
of success, affirmations of power, that will antidote the poverty
disease.
By constantly affirming your
divinity, the truth of your being, the reality of you, as one with God,
holding the thought that
God is your health, that He is in every atom, in every
electron, that He is in every cell in your body, and that His presence
excludes all sickness, disease and weakness, all lack
and unhappiness, you will impress the consciousness of God’s presence
on every cell of your being, and then you cannot be
anything but well, happy and prosperous.
No colds, no rheumatism, no cancerous
poisons, no tubercular germs, no fear, no unhappiness, no discord of
any kind, can exist
in you when you are vitally conscious of God’s
presence in every cell in your body. While you feel conscious of your
oneness
with the One, that every cell in you is one with Him,
because all life is the one life, the expression of the one vitality
which pervades the universe, you can not suffer in any
part of your being.
The consciousness of God, the
consciousness that He fills every cell in our body, that there can be no
discord, no disease,
no weakness where God is; that where God is, all is
health, all is beauty, that God is truth and the truth makes you free,
because it is the truth of your being,—this
consciousness of your oneness with God makes you free from the enemies
of your
health, your success and your happiness.
Stamp this God-consciousness on every
cell in your body. Cling to this one thought of God’s allness and
everywhereness, that
there can be nothing but God, that wherever you look,
wherever you go, all is God, and that because there is nothing but God,
all is good and there is nothing but good, everything
which does not seem to be good, having no reality, being but the absence
of good. Hold this thought constantly, and you will be
free from all the enemies of your being.
If we would triumph over all our
limitations, we must impress the triumphant thought on every cell. We
must radiate through
the body not only thoughts of health and strength, but
also of courage, hope, confidence, expectation of better conditions.
Instead of radiating through our system, as most of us
do, the poverty thought, the lack thought, the conviction that we are
the slaves of social and economic systems above which
we cannot rise, we must radiate the abundance thought, the freedom
thought,
the expectation of prosperity, of opulence. Instead of
stamping the failure thought, the thought of mediocrity, or
incompetence
upon our cells, we must stamp upon them the conviction
of superb ability, of confidence that we can accomplish what we
undertake,
because we are in partnership with God, and in close
touch with divine supply. We must constantly cultivate the habit of
radiating
the thought triumphant, the habit of radiating
masterfulness instead of weakness.
After a little practice in the
cultivation of upbuilding thought, the health thought, the success
thought, the happy thought,
the vibrations will reach every remotest cell in our
bodies, and we shall feel the thrill of health, of hopefulness, of
expectancy
of better things animating and energizing our whole
being.
What we think and believe we create.
Hence, if we would always hold the ideal suggestion of everything in
life, the ideal
suggestion of health, the ideal suggestion of our
ability, of our efficiency, the ideal suggestion regarding our career,
our
success, our happiness, the ideal suggestion of our
destiny, it would transform our lives, it would lift us from the common
to the uncommon. It would make us artists in life
instead of mere artisans.
Heart-To-Heart Talks With Yourself
The positive man keys his life to the “I can”
note, the negative man to the “I can’t.” Say to yourself “Health, luck,
usefulness,
success are mine, I claim them.” Keep thinking that
thought, no matter what happens.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
“My words are spirit and they are
truth; and they shall not return to me void; but shall accomplish that
whereunto they were
sent.” How many of us grasp the real significance of
this Biblical utterance? Or of this other: “And the word was made flesh
and dwelt among us”? How many of us ever think that
our own words, our uttered thoughts are living forces and are made
flesh?
Yet it is literally true that they are being out
pictured in our body, are chiseling our physique, shaping our faces,
molding
our expression to their likeness. What we think and
say reappears not only in our expression, but also in our physical
condition,
in our health, good or bad, according to the nature of
our thoughts and words. Every word we speak is an indestructible force,
because it affirms a thought, a sentiment, an emotion,
a motive, which never ceases to exert its power.
Jesus evidently recognized that words
are real forces, for He said, “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my
word shall not
pass away.” Material things might pass away, but His
word was a force which could never cease to exercise its power.
All through the Bible the power of the word is emphasized. “The ‘Word was made flesh and dwelt among us,” “The Word was with
God, and the Word was God,” “He sent His Word and healed them.”
There is a mysterious power in the
spoken word, in the vigorous affirmation of a thought, which registers a
profound impression
on the subconscious mind, and the silent forces within
us proceed to make the word flesh, to make the thing we affirm a
reality.
There is a tremendous constructive power in
registering your vow, in vigorous, determined affirmation, backed by a
persistent,
dogged endeavor to bring about the thing we desire.
A very striking proof of this was
afforded in the European war, in the awful conflict at Verdun in 1916.
As stated in a telegraphed
report from a high French officer, the fundamental
secret of French resistance to the terrific German onslaught was
psychological.
It was, he said, auto-suggestion on a vast scale.
General Petain replaced doubt and discouragement with iron determination
when throughout the entire army flashed his expressed
resolution that the Germans should not get through the French lines—
“Ils ne passeront pas.” (They shall not pass.) All of
the soldiers were so hypnotized by the constant repetition of the
phrase,
Ils ne passeront pas” that no idea save that of
resistance could enter their heads.
There is no doubt that it trebled and
quadrupled the resisting power of the army. The mighty suggestion of
invincibility in
the words was literally the decisive factor in the
battle. The repetition of “They shall not pass,” was what enabled the
infantry
to undergo unexampled bombardment and then rush
forward with the bayonet as eagerly as fresh troops. It was the
explanation
of confidence in victory seen even in captured
Frenchmen which amazed their German captors.
The French officer’s report further
stated that a surgeon in the dressing station close to the front said
the most remarkable
thing about the wounded was their general attitude of
determination. In some cases, the faces seemed fixed with an expression
of ferocious resolution, especially among those
suffering from shell shocks, and the soldiers only partially conscious
would
repeat at intervals of their delirium, “Passeront pas,
passeront pas.”
All of the soldiers at Verdun were
obsessed by this one dominating idea to the exclusion of everything
else. “The Germans
shall not pass.” A correspondent at the front said: “I
saw a regiment coming back to rest after six days in the trenches.
The soldiers all seemed animated by a spirit of
intense determination and iron resolution. When asked their opinion of
the
battle, the general reply was just this: “The Germans
shall not pass.” And the Germans did not pass.
Suppose you should register in your
subconsciousness regarding the entrance into your mind of destructive
thoughts, motives
and emotions, the bitter enemies of your success and
happiness, a grim resolution such as the French soldiers at Verdun
registered
regarding the Germans, what would happen? If whenever
enemy thoughts or emotions tried to get entrance to your mental kingdom
you should grimly say to them, “You shall not pass. I
will not allow in my mind any enemies of my success and happiness,”
do you think it would be possible for them to get by?
Why, of course they couldn’t. It would be impossible. And if you should
iterate and reiterate the same grim resolve regarding
hindering habits, regarding every temptation that makes an appeal to
you, “You shall not pass”? ‘Why, my friend, this would
revolutionize your life.
Every word we speak, even uttered
thought, is power for good or ill, and we must remember that it is what
we put into the
word that gives it its meaning, and determines its
quality and its force. Words themselves are the clothes for our
thoughts.
We can take a word and think love into it, think
service into it, think friendliness into it, and it will create a
corresponding
feeling in the one it is addressed to. Or we can take
the same word and think hatred into it, think jealousy into it, think
envy into it, and hurl it out and arouse antagonism,
jealousy, hatred or envy in another mind. We know that we can do the
same thing with a dog, and he will feel the thought—
the love or the hate, the anger or the contempt—which we put into the
word. We can fling out hatred and bitterness, sarcasm,
malice, in words; we can arouse the anger which kills, or we can call
out love, admiration, sympathy, friendship. Everything
depends upon the thought behind the word. It is the mental attitude
that gives the word its real meaning. And your words
are messengers of life or death to yourself and to others.
Words have put civilization where it
is today. The word wedded to the thought has built everything that man
has achieved.
He speaks and it is done, just as God spoke and the
earth was created, man and every living thing was created. Everything
is made out of God’s thoughts, out of God’s ideas, and
He speaks through man.
There is a force in spoken words
which is not stirred by going over the same words mentally. When
vocalized they make a more
lasting impression upon the mind. You know how much
more powerfully you are impressed and inspired by listening to a great
lecture or sermon than you would be if you read the
same thing in print. We remember the spoken word when we forget the cold
type which carries thought to the brain. It makes a
deeper impression on the inner self.
We can talk to our inner or other
self, just as we would talk to a child; and we know from experience that
it will listen
to and act on our suggestions. We are constantly
sending suggestions or commands to this inner self. We may not do so
audibly,
but we do so silently, mentally. Unconsciously we
advise, we suggest, we try to influence it in certain directions.
By consciously, audibly addressing
it, in heart-to-heart talks with ourselves, we find that we can very
materially influence
our habits, our motives, our methods of living. In
fact, the possibilities of influencing the character and the life by
this
means are practically limitless.
Many people have killed character
enemies, peace and happiness enemies, have doubled and quadrupled their
self-confidence,
have strengthened tremendously their initiative, their
executive ability; have literally made themselves over, by
heart-to-heart
talks with themselves.
I know a man who has so completely
changed his timid, self-effacing nature by talks with his other self
that no one would
dream that only a few years ago he was so shy, so
extremely sensitive, that he would blush scarlet if attention were
called
to him in any gathering, and he would avoid people in
every possible way.
Five years ago no amount of money
would have induced this man to get up in a public meeting, even to put a
motion or to make
the simplest statement. I think he would have fainted
away at the mere calling of his name in a public place. Not only had
he no confidence whatever in himself, but he had a
haunting obsession that he was a fraud. Although a perfectly honest,
earnest,
hard-working man, with good intentions toward all, he
could not help feeling that in some way he was not genuine, and that
sometime something would happen to show him up in his
true light.
For years he suffered untold tortures
from his foolish imaginings about himself. Conscious that he had
ability, but cursed
with weaknesses that made it in many ways unavailable,
his life was headed towards failure when he accidentally came across
a book which told him of the miracles possible through
the practice of self-encouragement, and especially audible
self-encouragement.
He began immediately to carry out the suggestions of
the book, and made a daily habit of heart-to-heart talks with himself.
In a very short time he was conscious of a great
improvement in his feelings, his mental attitude, and his spirits. Many
people
noticed an improvement in his manner and bearing. And
now he presides at public meetings without the slightest feeling of
self-consciousness. His painful shyness has vanished;
he can stand any amount of criticism and denunciation without a sign
of sensitiveness or embarrassment.
There is no fault, no weakness, great
or small, which will not succumb to persistent, audible autosuggestion.
Not only this,
but it tends to arouse slumbering qualities within us
which mere thinking does not stir up or waken. Most people are only
half alive, half awake to their possibilities. We all
need stirring up. There is gunpowder enough in us to make a tremendous
explosion if we could only get the spark to the giant
powder that is sleeping within us.
If you are timid, doubting, fearful
of failure, or poverty, you can reinforce your courage and strengthen
your confidence
in yourself by daily heart-to-heart talks with your
inner self, by the frequent affirmation of the positive assertions “I
must,” “I can,” “I will.” There is no better
suggestion than Emerson’s for stiffening the will and the power to do:
“Nerve
us with incessant affirmatives.” And incessant
affirmatives will nerve us.
The perpetual affirmation of the
power to achieve one’s ambition, of one’s grim determination to win out
in life at any cost;
the affirmation of health, of prosperity, of success,
the constant assertion of confidence in one’s self, of the belief in
his ability to do the thing that he has set his heart
on, will nerve a weak will and brace up a wavering purpose as nothing
else can.
If you are not satisfied with your
progress so far, if you are not growing bigger and broader in character,
more efficient
in your work, something is holding you back, hindering
you from making your ideal real. Find out what it is and then remove
it by audible self-treatments.
The best way to find what is your
stumbling block is to have a frequent heart-to-heart talk with yourself.
Look into your
own soul and take an account of your personal stock,
your success and failure qualities. Analyze yourself as you would a
friend
you were anxious to help, and whose strong and weak
points you could see clearly.
Get by yourself in your room, or,
infinitely better, in some quiet place in the country where you can be
absolutely alone
with your Maker, and examine yourself something after
this fashion, putting the questions aloud, and addressing yourself by
name:
“Now (James or Ann, or whatever your
name is) what is the trouble with you? Why do you not get along faster?
Do you lack ambition
or has it not yet been awakened? Why are you not doing
at least as well as others around you are doing under similar
conditions?
Why are you plodding along in mediocrity while those
all about you with no better chances, perhaps infinitely poorer chances
than yours, are getting on by leaps and bounds? There
must be some reason for this? Do you lack vitality, energy; or are you
not using what you have? Have you some weakness,
defect or peculiarity which is holding you down? Are you the victim of a
weak link in the chain of your character which is
nullifying all your efforts in other directions? Where is the trouble?
You
must put your finger on it and correct it or your life
may be a failure.”
Write out a list of the qualities
that make a strong, courageous, successful character, and their
opposites, those that make
a weak, timid, unsuccessful one, and examine yourself
to see what your rating in the list is. Call them off aloud—faith,
courage,
self-confidence, ambition, enthusiasm, perseverance,
concentration, initiative, cheerfulness, optimism, thoroughness, etc.
Ask yourself if you possess these splendid qualities,
or if you incline to their opposites.
Don’t be afraid to face your weak
points, or your fool streaks, to call your faults by their right names.
Bring them into
the light, see them for what they are, and then
grapple with them. You can not afford to be less than God intended you
to
be, to be less than you feel that you should be and
can be, to have your life spoiled by some defect which you can overcome.
When you have gone over the specific
character qualities ask yourself these broader questions; always
visualizing and addressing
yourself by name: “What are you here for? What do you
mean to the world? What message does your life, your career, bring to
it? What do you mean to your community? What do you
stand for? What do you represent? Do you realize that you were sent here
with a message for humanity? Are you delivering it
like a man, like a woman, patiently, persistently, determinedly, without
grumbling, whining or shirking? What are you giving to
the world? Do you mean much of anything to anybody but yourself? Is
your sole aim self-aggrandizement, to get more
reputation, more money, more comforts for yourself? Does your ambition
as far
as possible shut others out of your life? Are you
always going to do the kindly deed, going to help others in the future,
when you get on a little further, when you are better
able, when all your own wants are satisfied? Are you dreaming of the
big thing you are going to do tomorrow, or are you
doing the little things which you can do today, giving yourself as you
go along; giving, if you have nothing else to give,
encouragement, inspiration, helpfulness to those on the way with you?
Would your community miss you very much if you should
drop out of it?”
Probe yourself in this manner until
you get a good line on yourself, a fair estimate of yourself; until you
know both your
strength and your weakness; until you can see with
clear eyes the things that are keeping you back, the lack in your nature
that is handicapping you, the weakness that is cutting
down the average of your ability by ten, twenty, fifty or even
seventy-five
per cent. Then vigorously attack your enemies,—the
enemies of your success, of your efficiency, of your happiness.
Constantly
stoutly affirm your complete mastery over them, their
powerlessness to dominate your life and ruin your career.
If, for instance, you are a victim of
self-effacement; if you find you lack self -confidence, if you never
dare undertake
any responsibility you can possibly avoid, if, instead
of asserting your individuality and assuming the dignity that is yours
by divine right, you shrink from everything which
draws attention to yourself; if you have no faith in your ability, you
must
talk to yourself something like this:
“I am a child of God. I am made in
His image and likeness. I am a partaker of all His divine qualities.
Therefore I have divine
power; I have strength and ability to do what I long
to do. I am strength. I am ability. I am self-confidence. I am success.
I can do what I will to do, and will no longer suffer
this cowardly timidity to rule me. I will never again by
self-depreciation
and self-effacement, deny my divine Fatherhood. It is a
sin against my Father and myself to belittle my heritage from Him.
I am the son of an all powerful King, and henceforth I
will act the part. I will walk the earth like a prince. I will never
again shrink from assuming any responsibility which
comes to me. I have plenty of ability to do what I long to do, to be
what
I long to be. I will no longer go about as if I were
inferior to others. I am not inferior, and from now on I shall express
my opinion and assert myself whenever and wherever
necessary.
“I am now facing life with a
self-respecting, confident attitude, with a hopeful outlook, for I know
that as a child of God
I am victory-organized. Self-depreciation is a crime, a
reflection upon my Creator who pronounced everything He made good.
Lack of faith in myself is nothing but lack of faith
in Him. I will cut it out of my life, for I am that which I think I am.
I can be nothing more, nothing less. As a child of
Omnipotence, of the All-Good, I am bound to make good in every detail of
my life. I owe this to my Father and to myself.”
By heart-to-heart talks of this sort
with yourself you can change your whole nature, revolutionize your
career. Whether it
is faith, courage, initiative, cheerfulness, whatever
it is you lack, assume the quality you wish to possess, affirm
positively
that it is already yours, exercise it whenever
possible, concentrate on it, and you will be surprised how quickly you
can
acquire the desired. I am a great believer in the
building power of affirmation; in the possibilities in persistently
affirming
the thing I am determined to do, in strengthening
qualities in which I am weak, in building character, in making life
noble.
The following strong, positive affirmations by C. D. Larson are very suggestive and would make a splendid daily exercise:
I will become more than I am.
I will achieve more because I know that I can.
I will recognize only that which is good in myself; that which is good in others.
I will be more determined when adversity threatens than ever in my life to prove that I can turn all things to good account.
I will wish only for that which can give freedom and truth, which can add to the welfare of the race.
I will always speak to give encouragement, inspiration and joy.
I will work to be of service to an
ever-increasing number; and my ruling desire shall be to enrich,
ennoble and beautify existence
for all who may come my way.
When you assert yourself, assert the
spiritual “I,” the God image in you, not the physical “I,” the flesh of
you. This would
be mere egotism, and it is not asserting your egotism
that will benefit you. This will only hurt you. But asserting the
reality,
the divinity of yourself will do everything for you.
Your divine or real self is your potential self, your creative self,
and when you assert the reality of your being, not the
outward or bodily personality, you are simply asserting divinity, you
are asserting omnipotence, omniscience, and you are
asserting a power that can do things.
If we could only realize the creative
power of affirmation, of assuming that we are the real embodiment of
the thing we long
to be or to attain, not that we possess all the
qualities of good, but that we are these qualities,—with the constant
affirming,
“I myself am a part of the great creative, sustaining
principle of the universe, because my real, divine self and my Father
are one”—what happiness it would bring to earth’s
children!
Affirmation is a living, vital force. The Bible owes much of its strength to this force. It is a book of affirmations, of
strong, positive statements. But for this fact it would long ago have lost its power.
There is no parleying, no arguing, no
attempt by the sacred writers to prove the truth of what they say. They
merely assert,
affirm dogmatically that certain things happened, and
that certain other things would happen. Had they attempted to prove
the authenticity of what they wrote, endeavored to
convince the reader that they were honest men making genuine statements,
they would have aroused doubts. But there is no appeal
to sympathy, no appeal to the readers’ credulity, no appeal for
confirmation,
no posing for effect, only unrelenting positiveness,
persistent affirmations. They simply state facts and affirm principles.
Every line breathes dominance, superiority and
confidence. In this lies their tremendous power. There is no sentimental
imploring
even in the Lord’s Prayer. It demands. It is “give
us,” “lead us not,” forgive us,” etc.
In your talks with yourself, be like
the Biblical writers. Don’t wobble, or “think,” or “hope.” Say stoutly,
“I am,” “I can,”
“I will,” “It is.” Constantly, everlastingly affirm
that you will become what your ambitions indicate as fitting and
possible.
Do not say, “I shall be a success sometime”; say “I am
a success now. Success is my birthright.” Do not say that you are going
to be happy in the future, say to yourself, “I was
intended for happiness, made for it, and I am happy now.” Say with Walt
Whitman, “‘I, myself, am good fortune.’” Assert your
actual possession of the things you need; of the qualities you long to
have. Force your mind toward your goal; hold it there
steadily, persistently, for this is the mental state that creates. This
is what causes the word to be made flesh. The negative
mind, which doubts, wavers, fears, creates nothing. It cannot send
forth a positive, confident assertion.
We are constantly letting loose
mighty thought forces, emotion forces, word forces which are forever
multiplying and expressing
themselves in the universal energy, which are forever
fashioning our conditions. We are rich or poor, healthy or unhealthy,
successful or unsuccessful, happy or unhappy, noble or
ignoble, according to our use of our thought and word forces. The outer
registration in the flesh, in all material
circumstances and things, corresponds with the inner thought and the
decisive positive
word.
Let the spirit of you, the real self,
constantly affirm the “I am,” and the power you have through the
All-Power. Make your
affirmations quietly, but with great confidence and
positiveness. Say “I am united with Him. I am able to do what He wills
me to do. It is my duty to obey the inner urge of my
being, that divine ambition to measure up to my highest possibilities,
which ever bids me up and on. I will never again allow
anything to interfere with the free and full exercise of my physical,
mental and spiritual faculties. I will unfold all the
possibilities that the Creator has in-folded in the ego, the I of me.
There is no lost day in God’s calendar, no allowance
for waste, and henceforth I will make the most of the stuff that has
been given me. I will play the part of a son of
Omnipotence.”
But remember it is the life, the driving power of the spirit that gives the word its power. If you don’t mean what you say,
if you don’t live the meaning into your words, they are mere idle breath.
The same word, for instance, means a
very different thing when spoken by people of different types of
character. The same
words spoken by one person will heal diseases, while
spoken by another they will have no influence whatever upon the patient.
The difference in results is due to the difference in
the life, in the character, of the speakers. Some healers are
unsuccessful,
even when they are letter perfect in the intellectual
understanding of the healing principle, simply because they lack the
spiritual side, simply because their life does not
match their teachings.
In fact, it is the life, the
spiritual life that does the healing through the words which the
intellect suggests. Just as
faith without good works is of no avail without the
spirit, without the life behind them, words are cold and ineffectual.
When you long for anything that it is
right for you to have, affirm in perfect confidence that the thing is
already yours;
claim it as a reality; do what you can on the material
plane to make it yours, and soon you will reap what you have sown in
thought and in positive creative affirmation.
Say to yourself, “God is no respecter
of persons. Our Father is not and could not be, partial in His
treatment of His children.
To all, without distinction, He gives the same love,
the same rights and privileges. He will give me, through my own effort,
what I need, what I ask for. I can and I will do what I
long to do. I will be what I desire to be.”
Make these affirmations again and
again, and do not wait for an opportunity to begin the thing you want to
do. Make your opportunity.
The power of affirmation will work miracles for you.
You will find that, just in
proportion as you increase your confidence in yourself by the
affirmation of what you are determined
to be and to do, your ability will increase. No matter
what other people may think or say about you, never allow yourself
to doubt that you can do what you will to do. Boldly,
confidently assert that there is a special place for you in the world,
an individual role which only you can fill, and that
you are going to fill it like a man. Train yourself to expect great
things
of your self. Never admit, even by your manner, that
you think you are destined to do little things all your life.
The way to get the best out of
yourself, to make the most of your life, is to put things right up to
yourself, to handle yourself
without gloves, and talk to yourself as you would talk
to a very dear younger brother or sister, or to a son or daughter of
whom you expect great things and whose welfare is as
dear to you as your own, one whom you long to help to get on and up in
the world. You can do this with marvelous results in
correcting bad habits or overcoming temptations or dangerous tendencies.
In telling how he resisted the
temptation to drink when “the boys” wanted him “to take a drink,” Edison
said: “I thought I
had better use for my brain. I wanted all the brain
power I could get. I wanted to increase the efficiency of my life, and
not diminish it, not demoralize and benumb it. I did
not want to take into my mouth an enemy to steal away my brain. I wanted
to do the things which would increase, not diminish,
my brain power, which would increase, not lessen, my possibilities,
which
would increase and not destroy, my resources;
something which would increase my powers of investigation, of discovery;
something
which would increase my inventive ability, not destroy
it, and I said to myself: ‘I will let that greatest enemy of the race,
that enemy which has taken hold of more men and women,
ruined more careers, destroyed more happiness, than anything else in
the world, alone.’”
If you are in danger of becoming a
victim of drink, or if it has already laid its grip on you, say to
yourself what Edison
said: “ ‘I will let that greatest enemy of the race,
that enemy which has taken hold of more men and women, ruined more
careers,
destroyed more happiness, than anything else in the
world, alone.’ I cannot afford to give up even a small per cent of my
ability to whiskey. About the only success assets I
have are inside of my own skin. I haven’t anything to throw away. No one
has ever taken a drink who did not honestly believe at
the start that he could take it or let it alone as he wished, but their
experience shows that they miscalculated the power of
their enemy.
In such contests whiskey is nearly
always the victor. Knowing this, I will not gamble on my chances of
drinking and remaining
my own master. I am my own master now, and I shall
retain my mastership. I here assert my manhood, my inherited divinity,
the power given me by my Creator, which enables me to
conquer this monster drink or any other enemy of my manhood. I believe
with Saint Bernard that ‘nothing can harm me but
myself,’ and hereby pledge myself to do nothing that will make me less
of
a man. I am poised in divine power. I am one with the
One.”
If any form of vice has gotten a grip
upon you, don’t let it frighten you or drive you to despair, but brace
yourself at once
to get rid of it. Remember that there is something
within you that never can fall, that never can be stained,—that is the
God image. Just say to yourself, “If God made me, then
I must partake of God’s qualities; I must have power to overcome any
evil habit. This cursed thing which is ruining my
chances of future success and happiness is an insult to my manhood, an
insult
to my ideal of womanhood, an insult to my future wife,
a crime against my future children. It is not stronger than I am; it
is weaker. I will no longer allow it to usurp my
power, to smirch my manhood, honeycomb my character and destroy my
self-respect.
I hereby take a sacred oath with myself never to
repeat that which will cover up the divine image in me, lessen my
chances
in life, ruin my health and make me a failure, the
wreck of a man. I am a conqueror, not a slave; a divine force, not a
weak,
abject thing. I claim my birthright as a son of God. I
am a man, strong, successful, happy, and free. ‘I am the Captain of
my soul.’”
Whether in conquering an enemy habit,
driving out fear, or worry, or overcoming trouble or difficulty of any
sort, the repetition
in our heart-to-heart talks of some strong,
encouraging, uplifting Bible passages, such as the following, will be
found very
helpful.
“I the Lord will hold thy right hand,
saying unto thee, Fear not; I will help thee.” “I will be glad and
rejoice in Thy mercy;
for Thou hast considered my trouble. Thou hast known
my soul in adversities.” “The joy of the Lord is your strength.” “They
that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength;
they shall mount up with wings as eagles.” “Whoso putteth his trust in
the Lord shall be safe.” “I sought the Lord and He
heard me and delivered me from all my fears.” “Cast thy burden upon the
Lord and He shall sustain thee.”
If you are a vacillator; if your
great weakness is indecision; if you have a horror of being forced to
make a prompt decision;
if you are inclined to leave everything until the last
minute because you cannot bear to close anything of importance, to
cut off the possibility of taking it up again for
reconsideration; if you leave your letters unsealed, important papers
unsigned,
contracts open until you are actually forced to close
them, for fear you may wish to reconsider your decisions, you can cure
yourself of your weakness by talking to your inner
self about it, and making up your mind to be a man of decision instead
of a vacillator, a weakling.
Resolve every morning that for that
day at least you will decide things promptly, that you will act like a
man of firm purpose
and definite will, one who is characterized by a
faculty for vigorous, quick decision. After you have given yourself a
reasonable
time to look over the matter calling for decision and
to reach a conclusion, say to yourself, “This is the course to follow,”
or “This is the right thing to do. I will decide now
and get it off my mind. I will not reconsider, or open the question up
again. My judgment is correct. I will trust it. I can
think clearly, and decide vigorously, without procrastinating or
vacillating,
and from this day on I will do so.”
Impersonate every day someone you
admire for his promptness in putting things through, for his vigorous
self-confidence and
power of quick and final decision. No matter if you
make mistakes at first, stick to your resolve to decide things once for
all. ‘When a letter is written let it be sealed and
done with. When you have agreed to do a thing, do it at once; burn your
bridges behind you and leave no tempting way of
retreat in case you wish to reconsider your case. And continually
reinforce
yourself throughout the day with positive
affirmations,—”I am,” “I can,” “I will.”
But remember, if you do not act with the same grim resolution in making good your words as the French soldiers did at Verdun,
they will be worse than useless.
Always carry yourself as though you
were marching to victory, make this impression upon everyone who sees
you. Let victory
stand out of your very face, let it speak out of your
eyes with such determination, with such vigorous resolution that people
will know that there is no such thing as keeping you
down, no such thing as discouraging you, because you are
victory-organized,
because you are in the habit of winning.
Give people the suggestion of
invincibility. This will be worth more to you than a large amount of
money capital without it,
or with an appearance of cowardice or defeat in your
face, a suggestion of weakness or doubt, fear as to the outcome of your
career.
Think what the suggestion of
invincibility in a general of an army means! Think what it means to
Joffre! The French people
know that there is no such thing as defeating him in
the end, no such thing as defeating his pluck or his grit. They know
that as long as his life shall last courage will be
there, will lead the way. They know that his grim resolve will never
yield.
Think what such an appearance of invincibility would
mean to you!
These heart-to-heart talks are merely
suggestions, or models of the self-treatment method of overcoming bad
habits or defects
of character, for acquiring strength and developing
the qualities that make for nobility, success, happiness, righteousness.
They may be adapted to meet the requirements of
different personal needs, and if practiced faithfully every day, several
times
during the day, if possible, and just before retiring
at night, they will, if backed up by earnest effort to make your words
true, do wonders in bringing about the desired
results.
Talking to yourself may at first seem
silly to you, but you will soon get accustomed to it and feel its
beneficial effects.
You will think more highly of yourself, you will have
more self-respect, more self-confidence; you will believe more in
yourself,
you will have more assurance, more confidence in your
ability, you will stand higher in your own estimate in every way. This
does not mean that you will become egotistical or
conceited, but simply that you will know yourself and your possibilities
better, and be able to use to better advantage all the
power and talent God has given you.
In your heart-to-heart talks always
encourage yourself; always talk up, never down. In every possible way
try to establish
confidence in yourself, because a great self-faith is a
powerful force, a creative force. “According to thy faith be it unto
thee.” That is, according to the degree, the
intensity, the persistency of your faith, so will be your realization.
Our Partnership With God
The nearer we are to Omnipotence the greater our strength.
Life will take on new meaning, greater dignity, a higher power when we live in constant realization of our at-one-ment with
our Creator, our at-one-ment with the One, our partnership with the All-Good.
When Christ emphasized the fact that
the kingdom of Heaven is within us, He meant that this kingdom within is
identical with
the great cosmic intelligence of the universal mind,
and that here we tap the source of all supply. The kingdom that is
within
us is the kingdom of power. It is in the great within
of us that we make wireless connections with Omnipotence, with
Omniscience,
with Omnipresence. Here is where we actually feel the
pulsation of the allness and the everywhereness of God, and are
conscious
of our connection with the One, our oneness with the
All-good.
The greatest discovery of the centuries is the discovery of the identity, the oneness of the mind in our subconscious selves
with the great universal mind, the cosmic intelligence.
“What discovery in twenty centuries,”
says Dr. Abel T. Allen “compares with this, that man has learned to tap
the universal
mind, the infinite reservoir of his own soul and
thereby create health, ability, character, or any other quality he may
desire?”
The idea that man can control and
adapt to his own growth and enlargement the cosmic intelligence which
flows to him through
his subconscious self; that by his own power of choice
and will this cosmic, creative intelligence everywhere present can
be utilized by man as a creative force, is one of the
most astounding truths that has ever come to the human mind.
Years ago Henry Ward Beecher said
that thinking is creating with God. Yet how few of us realize even today
that we cannot
think without creating and that if we think helpful
thoughts, unselfish thoughts, love thoughts we are creating with God.
The new thought of God takes God into partnership, and when we realize the divine cooperation in our lives we think as “we,”
not ‘‘I.”
This new thought of God gives us a
new conception of man and of his relation to his God. It teaches us that
we are a vital,
inseparable part of Deity; that we are a part of the
great creative Mind, and that we are creating everyday, because we
cannot
think, we cannot feel, we cannot act without creating
something.
The new philosophy of life teaches us
that there is something in man that is inviolable, something that was
never born and
will never die, something that cannot be contaminated,
that cannot sin. It teaches us that there is a divinity within us which
is never impaired; that no matter what happens to the
rest of us, this divinity, the God in us, is untarnished, inviolable.
A human being’s power depends very
largely upon his God-consciousness, upon his conscious partnership with
his Creator. The
closer the relation, the closer the man’s
God-consciousness, the consciousness of his oneness with the One, the
more power
he can express, because he draws upon the limitless
resources of his Infinite Partner.
Many people seem to have an idea that
the creative intelligence out of which everything we know has been
created was, in the
beginning, localized somewhere in a Creator’s mind,
but we now know that this great creative intelligence or force is
everywhere.
We know that it exists in every cell in our bodies,
and in every created object.
Just as the entire man with all the
traits and characteristics of his ancestors, and with his own
possibilities and his own
destiny, was wrapped up in the microscopic protoplasm
which unfolds into the full-grown man, so the future lily, the rose,
the tree, the fruit, the vegetable, lives in the
apparently unorganized protoplasmic germ from which it started. In these
microscopic germs creative intelligence dwells. Every
atom, every electron in the universe is the home of the divine
intelligence
which creates and sustains all things.
This intelligence is not fragmentary
in the atom or electron, any more than certain parts of the oak are
fragmentary in the
acorn. The whole of the mighty oak lives in
possibility in the acorn. There is nothing added to the oak which was
not an amplification
of the cell life in the acorn. What the soil, the
chemistry of the sun, the moisture and the atmosphere have added to it
were
mere helps to the unfolding of the germs in the acorn.
What is true of the oak, or any other
created thing is true of man. The entire Lincoln lived in the
protoplasmic germ from
which he sprang. All his possibilities were there. His
environment, his education, the part he played in life were merely
helps to unfold, to bring out that possible Lincoln
which existed in the protoplasmic germ.
The new thought of God shows us that
creation has never been finished; that it is a perpetual process which
never ceases to
be operative. It teaches that the Creator is never
separate from His creation, that man is not a separate unit thrown off
to sink or swim at the mercy of chance, or a cruel
destiny, but that he is one with his Maker, united with Him in creative
work. It declares that he is a part of the infinite
intelligence, of the universal mind, and that he expresses so much of
the great universal intelligence as he can appropriate
and utilize.
Anything we ever can need or want is
in us awaiting release, awaiting expression. The thought of separateness
from our divine
Source robs us of power to express or create, because
we can only have that degree of power which our consciousness embodies.
Only that is ours which we can express. All of our
weakness, our troubles, our worries, our fears, our sufferings, and our
diseases come from our conscious separation from our
living, vital, throbbing, creative force.
We now know that man is like a
partner in an enormous concern. His resources are not limited to his own
little capital. He
can draw upon the firm as long, as there is anything
to draw. We are all God’s partners, and our capacity for creation
depends
very largely upon our consciousness of our divine
partnership.
“When man discovers his identity with
Spirit he begins to manifest Creation on his own account,” says one
writer. “No longer
a passive instrument, tool, or chessman in the cosmic
life, he becomes a center of creative power in himself. It is true that
he sees the phenomenal world for what it really is; he
sees that prizes and rewards of life are mere baubles and trinkets;
and he strives no longer for them for themselves. But,
in place of the old illusion, he sees a creative purpose in the cosmic
activities, a meaning in the universal ‘becoming,’ and
he smiles and takes his place again on the stage of life, playing his
part willingly, cheerfully, confidently, and
understandingly. His peep behind the scenes does not interfere with his
characterization
and the portrayal of his appointed part; on the
contrary, he plays his part all the better by reason of his knowing.”
When we have taken God into
partnership we are conscious that we are God-polarized, that we are in
the current which runs
God-ward. The consciousness of God, of being
reinforced and buttressed with infinite power, supported by infinite
wisdom,
gives a wonderfully increased sense of power. When you
realize your divine partnership, it will enlarge your life and multiply
your effectiveness, because it will take away from you
all sense of uncertainty, all feeling of inability to buffet the storms
of life, all sense of hopelessness in the presence of
overwhelming odds. It will give a new meaning to living because you
will know that you are not a victim of Fate, but that
your life is founded upon infallible fundamental principles.
When you take God into full, complete
partnership you will never fear. Your life’s venture cannot end in
chagrin. You will
never suffer lack or want, because you will then know
that if you want success, prosperity or anything needful, you must take
the material into your mind which will create what you
desire. You will head toward your ideals, toward the material which
you hold in your mind, and this is the stuff life is
made of. You will be led in green pastures and beside the still waters,
and you will fear no evil; no pestilence can touch you
because you are God-polarized, you are immune from all of the ills
of the flesh.
Holding steadily in mind the ideals of the things you want to bring to pass, the ideal of the man you want to be and the things
you want to accomplish, is actually necessary to the further process of creating.
Think of the miracles man has wrought
by holding his ideal in mind and working in cooperation with his God!
Compare, for instance,
our fruits and vegetables of today with the same kind
of fruits and vegetables as they were before man focused his mind upon
improving them and lifting them to higher levels!
Compare the luscious Indian River orange today with the sour, gnarled,
bitter
wild orange, the best that nature, unassisted by man,
could give us!
We know, of course, that man alone,
without the creative power implanted in him by God, never could have
evolved the luscious
fruits and succulent vegetables of all sorts which we
enjoy today out of the original inferior products as unassisted nature
left them.
The marvelous improvements man has
made upon the earth in lifting the things which God originally created
to higher and higher
and ever higher levels can only be accounted for
through his co-partnership with his Creator. It is the God in man
working
with the God in the great cosmic intelligence which
has lifted them to such heights.
The work which man has accomplished
in a multitude of different ways proves that he is one with God, that he
is a co-creator
with Him, and that together they can do what neither
could do alone. They are working together for the betterment of the
race.
Without the God power which, consciously or
unconsciously, is flowing through him, man could do nothing. Alone he
would be
powerless; and yet it is a strange thing that some of
our greatest inventors and discoverers have been skeptics, unbelievers
in God, when it was the God in them that helped them
to make their inventions or their discoveries.
As a matter of fact, when a man
invents or discovers that which benefits his fellow men, whether he
acknowledges it or not,
it is because the creative force in him is cooperating
with the divine force in the universal intelligence which is everywhere
present.
It is the creative force of divinity in Edison that has produced these marvelous inventions and facilities for eliminating
drudgery from, and beautifying, life, which Edison and his Maker together have given to the world.
Did you ever stop to think that
practically all of the great inventions and discoveries, improvements
and facilities which
are emancipating human beings from drudgery and hard,
painful conditions, and lifting mankind to a higher level, were once
regarded as “impossibilities”? Did you ever realize
that at one time those who attempted to make these “impossibilities”
realities
were ridiculed, called cranks or insane? People
thought they were obsessed, but they were obsessed only with the divine
urge
to create. This obsession would not let them rest
until they had realized in the actual the model which they had first
formed
in the mind. Think of the innumerable things man has
accomplished, even within the past century, how he has triumphed over
the obstacles that to the great majority seemed
insuperable, and succeeded by his creative energy in literally bringing
the
ends of the earth together!
It is the great God force working
with and through them that has enabled men in every age to accomplish
the “impossible.”
This force is back of the telephone, back of wireless
telegraphy, back of the steamship, the automobile, the airship, back
of the moving picture, the phonograph, and every
invention that has helped the world along its upward path.
No inventor can take personal credit
for the vision which came to him ready made. It is in his personal
effort, in his persistent
self-sacrificing struggle to make his vision a reality
that man’s strength and divinity are manifested. He is the working
medium, but still only the medium, through which the
electric light power, the telephone, the wireless and all the other
marvelous
things we are now enjoying came to the world.
Mr. Edison says that he regards
himself merely as a channel between the great cosmic intelligence and
the race for the passing
along of inventions which benefit mankind. Other great
benefactors of the race felt as he does. They did not believe that
they really originated the wonderful things which they
passed along to posterity, but that their minds were particularly
adapted
to reaching into the great cosmic ocean of
intelligence and attracting the things which they gave to the world.
They felt,
like Edison, that they were mediums for the
transmission of special blessings to man.
It is man working with God, the divine force, the God in man working with the great creative divinity that is lifting the
race and improving mankind. Man is not doing this as a separate unit.
There is a power in him back of the
flesh but not of it, working with the divine intelligence in the great
cosmic ocean of
thought, of cosmic intelligence. This power is
everywhere operative and is destined to lift every created thing up to
the
heights of its greatest possibility.
This is what is going, above all, to
help every man to play his part to the limit of his ability in the great
universal drama,
to make his highest possible contribution to the
universe. This is how the millennium will be brought about, by the
cooperation
of the divinity in man with the divine intelligence in
the cosmic world.
There seems to be no limit to man’s
possibilities as a miracle worker when he works with his God. The
brainiest man that ever
lived has never yet exhausted in any one direction the
cooperative marvels of his Maker. Who can imagine what our fruits,
our flowers, our vegetables, our cereals, our animals,
will be after another thousand years of the cooperative effort of man
with God!
The chrysanthemum which takes the
prize at flower shows today is a miracle of size and beauty compared
with the tiny, scrubby
chrysanthemum from which it sprang centuries ago. The
same thing is true of the rose, the carnation, the pansy, and all garden
flowers. At the same rate of improvement who can
foretell what these things will develop into even a hundred years from
now!
The marvelous creations which Luther Burbank,
cooperating with his God, has produced in the kingdom of flowers and
plants
are but indications of what the future will bring.
“Nature unaided fails” is the dictum of science. Luther Burbank is a partner with his Creator. Together they are doing what
neither could do alone.
Man is a necessary instrument in the
creative process. The Creator alone never has produced such wonderful
things as Burbank
and the Creator together have produced. Nor are
Burbank, Edison and other noted men exceptions in this respect. We are
all
co-creators with the great Creator of all.
Man as God’s partner is performing
miracles all over the world. He mixes his brains with the soil, and
behold, what marvelous
creations he calls out, as if he had touched it with a
magic wand! By his genius in selecting and combining stocks in the
animal and the vegetable world, he evolves the perfect
plant, the thoroughbred animal. The same mysterious cosmic intelligence
that pushes into the inventor’s mind the image and the
plan of a great invention is helping the horticulturist, the
agriculturist,
the stock breeder, the scientist,—all who are engaged
in creative and productive work.
Every great writer, artist,
inventor,—everyone who has done a really great thing,—has felt conscious
of receiving suggestions
from outside of his own brain, quite apart from what
he has received from other sources,—books, people, nature, study, etc.
In other words, he is conscious of being helped by
some great power back of his brain.
Great writers, for example, do not
deliberately think out in detail the things they are going to write.
Pictures come to them,
ideas flood their brains. Sometimes with such an
onrush do ideas come that they cannot write them all down or even
dictate
them. In moments of inspiration like this the poet,
the author, the musician, is merely a sort of secretary for the
mysterious
intelligence back of his brain.
Call it what we will, divine force or
the cosmic intelligence, that exists back of all atoms, in all
electrons, there is certainly
a formative intelligence that plans, and makes the
creative artist feel that he is merely the wireless receiving station
taking
off an immortal message, a message that has been
flashed from a divine station somewhere in the universe.
How often have messages been
transmitted to the inventor during sleep, when he has been totally
unconscious of trying to think
or plan an invention! How often has the poet received
in a dream, as by a flash of illumination, the line or the words he
needed to complete a poetic image!
Whence come these things? What formed
that divine image which lives first in the artist’s brain? He did not
deliberately plan
that picture which came to him full-orbed, perfect!
His own brain did not fashion the ideal. He merely reproduced it on
canvas.
Whence came that model in the
sculptor’s brain, which his imagination holds until with chisel and
mallet and deft hand he
calls it out of the marble in a wonderful statue that
all but breathes and lives. The sculptor did not deliberately make his
mental model. It came to him. He used it to help him
call his idea out of the block of marble. Without it there would be no
statue.
There is no other explanation than
that it came to him through the great creative Mind. All of these things
go to show that
man and God are one, that they are working together,
that they are partners, co-creators, that everywhere they cooperate in
producing, creating, improving, uplifting.
No one is a real success until he
takes God (Good) into partnership, until his own purpose and ambition
are squared with the
divine plan. That is, a man’s vocation must at least
not run counter to the purpose of the universe, which is based on the
unity of all things, which means team work.
If you are doing things which in some
way benefit the race, contribute to its highest welfare, then your
career is in tune
with the Infinite plan. You are cooperating with the
Creator in the team work of the race. You are a success. But if you are
doing something which runs counter to God’s world
plan, to this great cooperative team work of the race, you are a
failure,
and you cannot be really happy, because you are
working in opposition to your Creator.
There is something inside of a man
which protests against doing that which tends to injure another, that
which does not square
with his God nature, with the best thing in him; that
which is not working in response to his highest aspiration.
This is why men who are in
questionable vocations never feel quite right about their work. They are
never proud of it. Their
hearts are not in it. They would rather strangers
would not know what they are doing, unless they see in them the marks of
the brute, those things which have an affinity for
their own animality.
I have met professional gamblers, liquor dealers, bar tenders, dive keepers, and I have never known one who did not really
feel ashamed to have decent people know how they got their living.
When a man is selling useful
merchandise, working as a section hand on a railroad, as a street
cleaner, as a day laborer in
any useful field, he is not ashamed of his
work—unless, through lack of ambition or for any other reason he is
doing the lower
thing when something very much higher is possible to
him. But, no matter how humble, needful service, work which helps the
race along, is dignified, and, if done in the right
spirit, will be an opening to something higher.
When you take God into partnership,
when you are conscious that you are doing His work, you have a feeling
of peace and security.
You walk as one who sees a great light because you
feel that you have a great Partner, One with whom you cannot lose your
way. You do not fear failure because you know that
your divine Partner is the very Source of all supply, and you feel safe,
reassured. You know that nothing can prevent your
success as long as you and your Partner are in harmony.
Taking God into partnership means
that you must not only be honest, but that you must be robustly honest.
You know that you
cannot lie or cheat or steal. You know that you cannot
take advantage of anybody. You know that you must be kind and
considerate
to all. You know that you cannot be greedy or
grasping, and at the same time work with God.
If you take God into partnership you
know that you must be clean and pure-minded. You know that you cannot
indulge in low,
sensual pleasures. You know you cannot do anything
which will degrade another or push further down one who is already on
the
downgrade. Your plea that that one is already bad is
no excuse for you. If you take God into partnership you cannot despoil
or desecrate His creature. She is your sister. You
cannot take advantage of God’s child and have God for a partner, because
you will then be working against Him instead of with
Him.
Thousands of young men start with God as a partner and lose Him because He will not do business with a man who is not clean,
pure, and honest. If you would keep God as a partner you must do right and be right.
“I am the life and substance of the
Greater’ Mind,” says Paul Ellsworth, “and the recognition of this truth
frees me from
every false desire.” When you realize that you are one
with the Greater Mind, you will naturally take God into partnership,
and work in perfect harmony with Him. This will give a
new meaning to your life, and will turn you around completely so that
you will see the things that are really worthwhile.
You will see a new world. You will have a new zest in life, a new
ambition,
an ambition for the attainment of the higher things,
the things that give enduring satisfaction. You will lose interest in
that which before you thought essential, imperative,
to your happiness.
The things you drop will not be
wrenched away from you. You will drop them voluntarily for something
better, just as the child
will drop the apple for the orange, the orange for the
toy, and the toy in turn for something better, something bigger and
more attractive. Your motto will then be, “The best of
everything belongs to me because I am working in harmony with the
Creator
and inherit the best from the King of kings.”
When we have a Partner who is the
reality of wisdom, of love, of justice, a Partner who is the very source
of all supply,
we do not fear want, we do not fear poverty, we do not
fear sickness or death. We fear nothing because we know we are united
with Omnipotent Power, and that nothing but ourselves
can sever this divine connection.